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Labor Mobility in Bolivia:
On-the-job Search Behavior of Private and Public Sector Employees
Lykke E. Andersen, Bent Jesper Christensen
January 2006
This paper estimates structural parameters of both a
simple and an extended job separation model with the purpose of
understanding constraints in the labor market in Bolivia. The results
confirm the hypothesis that skilled labor is a scarce commodity in
Bolivia, while unskilled labor is abundantly available. This implies
that skilled employees shop around for alternative employment
opportunities and quit their jobs when a better opportunity arises. The
quit rate among skilled employees in the private sector is much higher
than the quit rate among skilled employees in the public sector. The
reverse is true for the lay-off rate, and together this suggests that
the private sector has difficulties maintaining its skilled labor. The
estimates of the wage sensitivity of job search effort parameters
presented in this paper suggest that it would be difficult for the
private sector to improve its capacity to retain skilled employees by
increasing wages – skilled employees in the private sector do not seem
to reduce their on-the-job search in response to higher wages. The
results are consistent with the hypothesis that the public sector in Bolivia, inflated by high
levels of foreign aid (about 10% of GDP), may be detracting scarce human
resources from local productive sectors, potentially jeopardizing the
opportunity for sustainable development.
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