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Table 5 Correlation between last occupation centrality and unemployment duration

From: The occupation space: network structure, centrality and the potential of labor mobility in the French labor market

 

Dependent variable: unemployment length

OLS

OLS

OLS

OLS-FE

(1)

(2)

(3)

(4)

Outward degree

 − 0.021

 

(1.29)

Outward strength

 − 0.159

 

(9.16)***

Centrality

 − 0.137

 − 0.264

 

(6.46)***

(1.89)*

Age

0.008

0.008

0.008

0.785

 

(14.27)***

(15.00)***

(14.51)***

(48.13)***

Diploma: (ref: higher diploma)

    

Some college

 − 0.058

 − 0.069

 − 0.064

 − 0.100

 

(2.02)**

(2.42)**

(2.25)**

(0.24)

Upper general high-school

0.007

 − 0.022

 − 0.008

 − 0.567

 

(0.28)

(0.88)

(0.33)

(1.11)

Upper technical high-school

0.059

0.020

0.037

 − 0.515

 

(2.57)**

(0.86)

(1.57)

(0.87)

Lower high-school

0.116

0.078

0.097

 − 0.476

 

(4.14)***

(2.76)***

(3.44)***

(0.77)

No diploma

0.194

0.147

0.168

 − 0.576

 

(8.39)***

(6.23)***

(7.16)***

(0.94)

Female (ref: male)

0.011

 − 0.011

 − 0.004

 
 

(0.88)

(0.88)

(0.36)

 

Seniority

0.001

0.001

0.001

0.000

 

(111.18)***

(99.86)***

(108.26)***

(1.07)

constant

1.069

1.861

1.643

 − 24.584

 

(14.00)***

(17.92)***

(15.00)***

(24.93)***

Year fixed effects

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

R2

0.02

0.03

0.03

0.20

N

25,502

25,502

25,502

25,502

  1. This table shows estimate from OLS and FE-OLS regressions of Eqs. (2) and (3). The outcome variable is unemployment duration. Column (1) shows estimates with outward degree. Column (2) reports estimates with outward strength. Column (3) shows estimates with Opsahl et al. (2010) Centrality index. Column (4) adds individual fixed effects to the estimation reported in column (3). Standard erors are clustered at the workers level
  2. *p < 0.1; **p < 0.05; ***p < 0.01