Abstract
Using new quarterly data for hours worked in OECD countries, Ohanian and Raffo (2011) argue that in many OECD countries, particularly in Europe, hours per worker are quantitatively important as an intensive margin of labor adjustment, possibly because labor market frictions are higher than in the US. I argue that this conclusion is not supported by the data. Using the same data on hours worked, I nd evidence that labor market frictions are higher in Europe than in the US, like Ohanian and Raffo, but also that these frictions seem to affect the intensive margin at least as much as the extensive margin of labor adjustment.
Published as:
How Important Is the Intensive Margin of Labor Adjustment?. Discussion of "Aggregate Hours Worked in OECD Countries: New Measurement and Implications for Business Cycles" By Lee Ohanian and Andrea Raffo
in Journal of Monetary Economics
January, 2012