Publication | Closed Access
The Selection of Talent: Experimental and Structural Evidence from Ethiopia
67
Citations
52
References
2021
Year
Development EconomicsEconomic DevelopmentTalented ApplicantsManagementExperimental EconomicsEconomic AnalysisSearch CostsTalented WorkersAfrican DevelopmentTalent DevelopmentEconomicsStructural EvidenceSearch FrictionsLabor Market OutcomeCandidate SelectionLabor EconomicsPerformance StudiesBusinessLabor Market ImpactPersonnel EconomicsAfrican City
We study how search frictions in the labor market affect firms’ ability to recruit talented workers. In a field experiment in Ethiopia, we show that an employer can attract more talented applicants by offering a small monetary incentive for making a job application. Estimates from a structural model suggest that the intervention is effective because the cost of making a job application is large, and positively correlated with jobseeker ability. We provide evidence that this positive correlation is driven by dynamic selection. In a second experiment, we show that local recruiters underestimate the positive impacts of application incentives. (JEL J23, J24, J31, J64, O15)
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