This article extends a classic on‐the‐job search model of homogeneous workers and firms by introducing a shirking problem. Workers choose their effort levels and search on the job. Firms elicit effort through wages and monitoring; an inverse relationship between wages and monitoring rates is derived. Wages play a dual role by allocating labor supply and motivating employee effort. This gives rise to an equilibrium wage distribution that contrasts with existing literature. In particular, I show that a hump‐shaped and positively skewed wage distribution, as observed empirically, can be derived even when firms and workers are, respectively, identical
International audienceWe construct an equilibrium job search model with on-the-job search in which f...
We examine how much of the observed wage dispersion among similar workers can be explained as a cons...
International audienceWe construct an equilibrium job search model with on-the-job search in which f...
Matched employer-employee data exhibits large and persistent wage and productivity dispersion across...
How much of residual wage dispersion can be explained by an absence of coordination among firms? To ...
In this paper I introduce a novel source of residual wage dispersion. In the model, workers are hete...
International audienceWe construct an equilibrium job search model with on-the-job search in which f...
Matched employer-employee data exhibits both wage and produc-tivity dispersion across firms and sugg...
We construct an equilibrium job search model with on-the-job search in which firms implement optimal...
We construct an equilibrium job search model with on-the-job search in which firms implement optimal...
We construct an equilibrium job search model with on-the-job search in which firms implement optimal...
We construct an equilibrium job search model with on-the-job search in which firms implement optimal...
We construct an equilibrium job search model with on-the-job search in which firms implement optimal...
International audienceWe construct an equilibrium job search model with on-the-job search in which f...
International audienceWe construct an equilibrium job search model with on-the-job search in which f...
International audienceWe construct an equilibrium job search model with on-the-job search in which f...
We examine how much of the observed wage dispersion among similar workers can be explained as a cons...
International audienceWe construct an equilibrium job search model with on-the-job search in which f...
Matched employer-employee data exhibits large and persistent wage and productivity dispersion across...
How much of residual wage dispersion can be explained by an absence of coordination among firms? To ...
In this paper I introduce a novel source of residual wage dispersion. In the model, workers are hete...
International audienceWe construct an equilibrium job search model with on-the-job search in which f...
Matched employer-employee data exhibits both wage and produc-tivity dispersion across firms and sugg...
We construct an equilibrium job search model with on-the-job search in which firms implement optimal...
We construct an equilibrium job search model with on-the-job search in which firms implement optimal...
We construct an equilibrium job search model with on-the-job search in which firms implement optimal...
We construct an equilibrium job search model with on-the-job search in which firms implement optimal...
We construct an equilibrium job search model with on-the-job search in which firms implement optimal...
International audienceWe construct an equilibrium job search model with on-the-job search in which f...
International audienceWe construct an equilibrium job search model with on-the-job search in which f...
International audienceWe construct an equilibrium job search model with on-the-job search in which f...
We examine how much of the observed wage dispersion among similar workers can be explained as a cons...
International audienceWe construct an equilibrium job search model with on-the-job search in which f...