The paper demonstrates that two relatively unknown features of the employment cycle in U.S. manufacturing industries can provide a clue to understanding the role of sectorial shocks in the evolution of aggregate employment. First, interindustry wage differentials rise in expansions and fall in contractions. Second, periods of increasing aggregate employment are associated with relatively good price and productivity shocks to capital-intensive sectors. The paper presents a simple general-equilibrium model where bargaining at the industry level and rents due to sector-specific capital generate a wage structure with higher wages in capital-intensive sectors but where the response of wages to sector-specific shocks is greater in labor intensive...
We develop an endogenous growth model with two sectors, manufacturing and non-manufacturing. The man...
This paper presents evidence on the relationship between cyclical shocks and productivity growth, fo...
The neoclassical effects of permanent technology shocks on employment is re-investigated. Contrary t...
This paper studies quarterly employment flows of approximately 10,000 U.S. manufacturing establishme...
This thesis consists of three essays, all of which examine the relative importance of aggregate dist...
I present three studies on wages and employment over the business cycle. In Chapter 1, I provide qua...
A defining feature of business cycles is the comovement of inputs at the sectoral level with aggrega...
In most manufacturing industries output is adjusted in a lumpy way along three margins: shiftwork, w...
This paper analyzes how changes in the skill mix of local labor supply are absorbed by the economy,...
This series of essays studies the observed fluctuations in the aggregate economy and the factors beh...
From page 63 -- 'Perfectly competitive models of the effects of aggregate demand variations on outpu...
We examine the relationship between o¤shoring and the labour market in an occupational choice model ...
Recent work by David Lilien has argued that the positive correlation between the dispersion of emplo...
Employment fluctuations are examined, at different levels of aggregation, in a dynamic model that pr...
We provide a simple explanation for the observation that the variance of job destruction is greater ...
We develop an endogenous growth model with two sectors, manufacturing and non-manufacturing. The man...
This paper presents evidence on the relationship between cyclical shocks and productivity growth, fo...
The neoclassical effects of permanent technology shocks on employment is re-investigated. Contrary t...
This paper studies quarterly employment flows of approximately 10,000 U.S. manufacturing establishme...
This thesis consists of three essays, all of which examine the relative importance of aggregate dist...
I present three studies on wages and employment over the business cycle. In Chapter 1, I provide qua...
A defining feature of business cycles is the comovement of inputs at the sectoral level with aggrega...
In most manufacturing industries output is adjusted in a lumpy way along three margins: shiftwork, w...
This paper analyzes how changes in the skill mix of local labor supply are absorbed by the economy,...
This series of essays studies the observed fluctuations in the aggregate economy and the factors beh...
From page 63 -- 'Perfectly competitive models of the effects of aggregate demand variations on outpu...
We examine the relationship between o¤shoring and the labour market in an occupational choice model ...
Recent work by David Lilien has argued that the positive correlation between the dispersion of emplo...
Employment fluctuations are examined, at different levels of aggregation, in a dynamic model that pr...
We provide a simple explanation for the observation that the variance of job destruction is greater ...
We develop an endogenous growth model with two sectors, manufacturing and non-manufacturing. The man...
This paper presents evidence on the relationship between cyclical shocks and productivity growth, fo...
The neoclassical effects of permanent technology shocks on employment is re-investigated. Contrary t...