This study revisits the sectoral shifts hypothesis for the US for the period 1948 to 2011. A quantile regression approach is employed in order to investigate the asymmetric nature of the relationship between sectoral employment and unemployment. Significant asymmetries emerge. Lilien’s dispersion index is significant only for relatively high levels of unemployment and becomes insignificant for low levels suggesting that reallocation affects unemployment only when the latter is high. More job reallocation is associated with higher unemployment
According to recent and largely untested theories, unemployment benefits (UBs) could improve the ext...
This dissertation examines the hypothesis that the dispersion of both employment and output growth r...
A model of sectoral reallocation is constructed where intersectoral friction is not caused by search...
This study revisits Lilien’s sectoral shifts hypothesis for the US. We employ quantile regression es...
open2siThis study revisits Lilien’s sectoral shifts hypothesis for the US. We employ quantile regres...
This study revisits Lilien’s sectoral shifts hypothesis for the US. We employ quantile regression es...
This study revisits the sectoral shifts hypothesis for the US for the period 1948 to 2011. A quantil...
This paper re-examines Lilien’s sectoral shifts hypothesis for U.S. unemployment. We employ a monthl...
This paper presents further evidence on the importance of sectoral shifts by examining unemployment ...
This article revisits the sectoral shifts hypothesis by examining unemployment fluctuations for 48 U...
open2noThis paper appraises the literature on the macroeconomic effects of job reallocations. We ove...
This paper revisits the sectoral shifts hypothesis by examining unemployment fluctuations for 48 U.S...
We explore the macroeconomic effects of sectoral shifts for 15 European countries. An exten-sive pan...
This article reconsiders the case for sectoral labor reallocation's role in the jobless recovery. Th...
Lilien’s (1982) dispersion measure of sectoral shifts of labor demand represents the effect of the c...
According to recent and largely untested theories, unemployment benefits (UBs) could improve the ext...
This dissertation examines the hypothesis that the dispersion of both employment and output growth r...
A model of sectoral reallocation is constructed where intersectoral friction is not caused by search...
This study revisits Lilien’s sectoral shifts hypothesis for the US. We employ quantile regression es...
open2siThis study revisits Lilien’s sectoral shifts hypothesis for the US. We employ quantile regres...
This study revisits Lilien’s sectoral shifts hypothesis for the US. We employ quantile regression es...
This study revisits the sectoral shifts hypothesis for the US for the period 1948 to 2011. A quantil...
This paper re-examines Lilien’s sectoral shifts hypothesis for U.S. unemployment. We employ a monthl...
This paper presents further evidence on the importance of sectoral shifts by examining unemployment ...
This article revisits the sectoral shifts hypothesis by examining unemployment fluctuations for 48 U...
open2noThis paper appraises the literature on the macroeconomic effects of job reallocations. We ove...
This paper revisits the sectoral shifts hypothesis by examining unemployment fluctuations for 48 U.S...
We explore the macroeconomic effects of sectoral shifts for 15 European countries. An exten-sive pan...
This article reconsiders the case for sectoral labor reallocation's role in the jobless recovery. Th...
Lilien’s (1982) dispersion measure of sectoral shifts of labor demand represents the effect of the c...
According to recent and largely untested theories, unemployment benefits (UBs) could improve the ext...
This dissertation examines the hypothesis that the dispersion of both employment and output growth r...
A model of sectoral reallocation is constructed where intersectoral friction is not caused by search...