What Can International Cricket Teach Us About the Role of Luck in Labor Markets?

How important is luck in determining labor market outcomes? We address this question using a new dataset of all international test cricketers who debuted between 1950 and 1985. We present evidence that a player's debut performance is strongly affected by an exogenous source of variation: whether the debut series is played at home or abroad. This allows us to identify the role of luck - factors unrelated to ability - in shaping future career outcomes. We find that players lucky enough to debut at home perform significantly better on debut. Moreover, debut performance has a large and persistent impact on long run career outcomes. We also make headway in empirically distinguishing between competing explanations for why exogenous initial conditions exercise a persistent impact on career performance
Publication date: October 2010
ISBN: 9781455208906
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Labor , labor market , standard errors , statistics , probability , Wages , Compensation , and Labor Costs: General , Particular Labor Markets: Other , Labor Market Outcomes , Initial Job Placement , Skill Versus Luck , Sports Economics , Instrumental Variables , Demographic Economics

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