Abstract This article appeals to heterogeneity in workers’ non-wage preferences to model taste-based discrimination. Firms hire both types of workers and pay lower wages to minority workers, whatever their taste for discrimination. A single prejudiced firm in the market produces a substantial wage gap in all firms. Consequently, discrimination allows unprejudiced firms to make non-zero profits, so that they have little incentive to drive out prejudiced firms. As the market does not eliminate discrimination, state intervention is required. Indirect policies do not affect the absolute wage gap between the two groups, but may be more likely to be used than direct policies
This article first parses the multiple overlapping definitions of discrimination, including distinct...
In the US labor market the average black worker is exposed to a lower employment rate and earns a lo...
In the labor market, statistical discrimination occurs when employers’ beliefs about workers’ behavi...
This paper studies labor market discriminations as an agency problem. It sets up a principal-agent m...
This paper considers a labour market model of monopsonistic competition with taste-based discriminat...
URL des Documents de travail : http://ces.univ-paris1.fr/cesdp/cesdp2011.htmlDocuments de travail du...
This article first parses the multiple overlapping definitions of discrimination, including distinct...
This paper considers a labour market model of monopsonistic competition with taste-based discriminat...
In the US labor market the average black worker is exposed to a lower employment rate and earns a lo...
This article first parses the multiple overlapping definitions of discrimination, including distinct...
This paper considers a labour market model of monopsonistic competition with taste-based discriminat...
In the US labor market the average black worker is exposed to a lower employment rate and earns a lo...
In the US labor market the average black worker is exposed to a lower employment rate and earns a lo...
In the US labor market the average black worker is exposed to a lower employment rate and earns a lo...
This article first parses the multiple overlapping definitions of discrimination, including distinct...
This article first parses the multiple overlapping definitions of discrimination, including distinct...
In the US labor market the average black worker is exposed to a lower employment rate and earns a lo...
In the labor market, statistical discrimination occurs when employers’ beliefs about workers’ behavi...
This paper studies labor market discriminations as an agency problem. It sets up a principal-agent m...
This paper considers a labour market model of monopsonistic competition with taste-based discriminat...
URL des Documents de travail : http://ces.univ-paris1.fr/cesdp/cesdp2011.htmlDocuments de travail du...
This article first parses the multiple overlapping definitions of discrimination, including distinct...
This paper considers a labour market model of monopsonistic competition with taste-based discriminat...
In the US labor market the average black worker is exposed to a lower employment rate and earns a lo...
This article first parses the multiple overlapping definitions of discrimination, including distinct...
This paper considers a labour market model of monopsonistic competition with taste-based discriminat...
In the US labor market the average black worker is exposed to a lower employment rate and earns a lo...
In the US labor market the average black worker is exposed to a lower employment rate and earns a lo...
In the US labor market the average black worker is exposed to a lower employment rate and earns a lo...
This article first parses the multiple overlapping definitions of discrimination, including distinct...
This article first parses the multiple overlapping definitions of discrimination, including distinct...
In the US labor market the average black worker is exposed to a lower employment rate and earns a lo...
In the labor market, statistical discrimination occurs when employers’ beliefs about workers’ behavi...