How early career choices adjust to economic crises

Published: 13 November 2025

Author: Julien Grenet, And Hans Grönqvist, And Edvin Hertegård, And Martin Nybom, And Jan Stuhler, And

We study how students adjust their early career choices in response to economic crises and how these decisions affect their long-run labor market outcomes. Focusing on Sweden’s deep recession in the early 1990s—which hit the manufacturing and construction sectors hardest—we first show that students whose fathers lost jobs in these sectors were more likely to choose career paths tied to less-affected industries. These students later experienced better labor market outcomes, including higher employment and earnings. Our findings suggest that informational frictions are a key obstacle to structural change and identify career choice as an important channel through which recessions reshape labor markets in the long run.

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IFAU-Working paper 2025:20 "How early career choices adjust to economic crises" is written by Julien Grenet (Paris School of Economics and CNRS), Hans Grönqvist (Linnaeus University and the Research Institute of Industrial Economics (IFN)), Edvin Hertegård (SOFI, Stockholm University), Martin Nybom (IFAU, Uppsala University) and Jan Stuhler (Department of Economics, Universidad Carlos III de Madrid). For more information please contact Martin at martin.nybom@ifau.uu.se, or Hans Grönqvist at hans.gronqvist@ifn.se.