TY - JOUR AU - Hamermesh,Daniel S. TI - The Demand for Workers and Hours and the Effects of Job Security Policies: Theory and Evidence JF - National Bureau of Economic Research Working Paper Series VL - No. 2056 PY - 1986 Y2 - October 1986 UR - http://www.nber.org/papers/w2056 L1 - http://www.nber.org/papers/w2056.pdf N1 - Author contact info: Daniel S. Hamermesh Department of Economics University of Texas Austin, TX 78712-1173 Tel: 512/475-8526 Fax: 512/471-3510 E-Mail: hamermes@eco.utexas.edu AB - There has been a wide variety of research on worker-hours substitution and the effects of various costs on the speed and extent to which labor demand adjusts. Much of this literature, though, confuses various types of fixed costs and fails to provide a guide for identifying how changes in labor-cost structures affect static relative demands for workers and hours and the paths by which they adjust. This study presents a typology of labor cost market policies in OECD countries are pigeonholed by their effects on labor costs are view of the evidence indicates clearly that there is some slight substitution between workers and hours along a constant effective-labor isoquant. The evidence is clear that employers adjust the demand for hours more rapidly than that for workers and that both adjust fairly rapidly. It also shows that a major effect of cost-increasing policies designed to induce substitution from hours to workers is a reduction in the total amount of worker-hours demanded. Original analysis demonstrates that lags in the adjustment of employment in response to changes in demand lengthened in most OECD countries during the 1970s. ER -