Hours constraints are typically identified by worker responses to questions asking whether they would prefer a job with more hours and more pay or fewer hours and less pay. Because jobs with different hours but the same rate of pay may be infeasible when there are fixed costs of employment or mandatory overtime premia, the constraint in those cases may be illusory. Cross-section estimates of reported hours constraints are consistent with this model implying that the overall level of hours constraints may exag-gerate the extent to which the labor market is characterized by frictions and imperfections. I
The main goal of this article is to to explain why the fixed workweek appeared. To this purpose we d...
Even though overtime is a widely observed phenomenon, this paper argues against the view of overtime...
This dissertation contributes to the understanding of employer-employee bargaining over hours of wor...
This paper uses a revealed preference approach applied to administrative data from Washington to doc...
In surveys, large minorities of individuals typically report that they would like to change their we...
In a labor market in which firms offer tied hours-wage packages and there is substantial dispersion ...
This study presents a model of labor supply in which individuals may face constraints on their choic...
This paper investigates constraints on desired hours of work using information on hours preferences ...
We use British panel data to investigate whether or not subjective data on desired labour supply pro...
In the empirical literature on labour supply, several models are developed to incorporate constraint...
Almost all labor supply models are estimated under the assumption that workers are free to choose th...
If hours can be freely varied within jobs, the effect on hours of changes in preferences for those w...
This paper provides empirical evidence on the assumption that individuals freely decide the number o...
Most of existing studies on labour supply, starting from Heckman (1974), estimate individual prefere...
We characterize optimal monetary policy in a New Keynesian search-and-matching model where multiple-...
The main goal of this article is to to explain why the fixed workweek appeared. To this purpose we d...
Even though overtime is a widely observed phenomenon, this paper argues against the view of overtime...
This dissertation contributes to the understanding of employer-employee bargaining over hours of wor...
This paper uses a revealed preference approach applied to administrative data from Washington to doc...
In surveys, large minorities of individuals typically report that they would like to change their we...
In a labor market in which firms offer tied hours-wage packages and there is substantial dispersion ...
This study presents a model of labor supply in which individuals may face constraints on their choic...
This paper investigates constraints on desired hours of work using information on hours preferences ...
We use British panel data to investigate whether or not subjective data on desired labour supply pro...
In the empirical literature on labour supply, several models are developed to incorporate constraint...
Almost all labor supply models are estimated under the assumption that workers are free to choose th...
If hours can be freely varied within jobs, the effect on hours of changes in preferences for those w...
This paper provides empirical evidence on the assumption that individuals freely decide the number o...
Most of existing studies on labour supply, starting from Heckman (1974), estimate individual prefere...
We characterize optimal monetary policy in a New Keynesian search-and-matching model where multiple-...
The main goal of this article is to to explain why the fixed workweek appeared. To this purpose we d...
Even though overtime is a widely observed phenomenon, this paper argues against the view of overtime...
This dissertation contributes to the understanding of employer-employee bargaining over hours of wor...