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Includes several papers on equilibrium search models (a relatively new field), and job matching, both seen from a theoretical and from an applied point of view. This volume discusses methods on and empirical analyses of unemployment durations. It is intended to contribute to further development in the use of panel data in economic analyses.
List of contents
Preface. Macro matching and micro search durations looking inside the black box of job formation (M. Lindeboom, J. van Ours). Job match quality over the business cycle (A. Bowlus). Estimating an equilibrium search model from wage data (G.J. van den Berg, G. Ridder). Wage dispersion with homogeneity: The empirical equilibrium search model (N.M. Kiefer, G.R. Neumann). Measurement of job exits: What difference does ambiguity make (T.J. Devine). Job separations in an efficient turnover model (R. Winkelmann, K.F. Zimmermann). Unemployment data, from surveys and administrative registers (K. Albak, A.H. Larsen). Reservation wages, wage offer distribution and accepted wages (C.M. Schmidt, R. Winkelmann). Data inaccuracies and sampling plan in a model of unemployment duration (N. Torelli, U. Trivellato). Testing for state dependence effects in a dynamic model of male unemployment behaviour (G. Flaig, G. Licht, V. Steiner). Heterogeneous duration dependence: Econometric methods and empirical evidence (P. Jensen). Inferential separation in the prototypal search model (B.J. Christensen, N.M. Kiefer). Efficiency considerations in tobit models with fixed effects (B.E. Honore). Estimation of limited dependent variable habit persistence models on panel data with an application to the dynamics of self-employment in the former East Germany (M. Lechner). The labour market behaviour of Danish lone mothers (N. Smith, I. Walker, N. Westergard-Nielsen). The effects of labour market training on wages and unemployment: Some Danish results (P. Jensen et al.). Insiders and outsiders in the Danish labour market. An empirical study (N.H. Bjorn, T.M. Pedersen). Mobility and individual earnings growth (T. Eriksson). Inter-industry wage premiums and labour mobility (K. Albak, E. Strojer Madsen). Job and worker flows in U.S. manufacturing (D.T. Mortensen). Search, matching and unions (K. Burdett, R. Wright). Benefits, insurance, and implicit contracts (I.S. Mikkelsen). An object-oriented approach to managing panel and duration data (H. Bunzel). Information sources and equilibrium wage outcomes (D.T. Mortensen, T. Vishwanath).
Summary
Includes several papers on equilibrium search models (a relatively new field), and job matching, both seen from a theoretical and from an applied point of view. This volume discusses methods on and empirical analyses of unemployment durations. It is intended to contribute to further development in the use of panel data in economic analyses.