This paper develops and tests a new model of asymmetric information in the labour market
involving employer learning. In the model, I provide theoretical conditions for the identification
– based on the experience and tenure profiles of estimated returns to ability and education –
of employer learning about unobserved worker’s productivity and statistical discrimination
based on years of schooling. Using data from two British birth cohorts, estimates based on
this model support the hypothesis that British employers have limited information about their
workers, make inferences based on their education levels, and progressively learn about
their true ability. Moreover, this learning process – particularly among blue-collar workers–
favours incumbent employers relative to potential competitors (asymmetric learning). This
informational advantage implies an additional distortion in the functioning of the labour
market and policy evaluation rarely takes into account the informational impact of
interventions and its implications for individual behaviour.
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