This paper examines the long-term effects of underemployment shocks on part-time employment, with a particular focus on voluntary part-time work. We use regional datasets for the European Union and the United States covering the period 2006-2019. Our empirical strategy combines a difference-in-differences framework with a shift-share instrument for underemployment shocks. In the EU, underemployment shocks are driven not only by an increase in part-time employment, but also by a decrease in the share of part-time employees who are satisfied with their working hours. Underemployment shocks have persistent effects, including a lasting negative impact on voluntary part-time employment. A one percentage point increase in the underemployment rate leads to a voluntary part-time employment rate that is 0.28 percentage points lower five years later. These effects are particularly pronounced among non-tertiary-educated women and in Western Europe. In Central and Eastern Europe, as well as in the US, we do not find statistically significant negative long-term effects of underemployment shocks on voluntary part-time employment
We thank Piotr Lewandowski and Iga Magda for their helpful comments. This paper uses Eurostat data. Eurostat bears no responsibility for the results and the conclusions, which are those of the authors. The usual disclaimers apply. This research was funded in whole by the National Science Centre, Poland (grant No. 2024/53/B/HS4/03007).