In Spence’s (1973) signaling by education model and in many of its extensions, firms can only infer workers’ productivities from their education choices. In reality, firms also use sophisticated pre–employment auditing to learn workers’ productivities. We characterize the trade–offs between signaling by workers and costly information acquisition by firms. Information acquisition is always associated with (partial) pooling of worker types, and education is used as a signal only if relatively few workers have low productivity. Our analysis applies also to other signaling problems, e.g. the financial structure of firms, warranties, and initial public offerings
We consider a matching model of the labour market where workers that differ in quality send signals ...
In a series of eleven markets, sellers possessed products that were exogenously designated as eithe...
This article belongs to the game theoretic and information economics literature dealing with the pro...
We analyze a competitive labor market in which workers signal their productivities through education...
We study competitive equilibria in a signaling economy with heterogeneously informed buyers. In term...
We study competitive equilibria in a signalling economy with heterogeneously informed buyers. In ter...
We consider a signaling model of the job market in which workers, before choosing their level of edu...
We analyze the Spence education game in experimental markets. We compare a signaling and a screening...
This study considers firms’ coarse information about a worker’s possible types in Spence’s (1973) jo...
Spence (1974a) considered a variant of his signaling model in which there are two types of jobs, and...
This paper analyzes what happens to the Spence signaling model when there is heterogeneity in two di...
The job market signaling model in Spence (1973) deals with a situation of asymmetric information. Wo...
An extensive theoretical literature has developed that investigates the role of promotions as a sign...
Many empirical works suggest that education has a positive effect on earnings not only because it ra...
The job market works under asymmetric information, making it hard for firms to know the real capabil...
We consider a matching model of the labour market where workers that differ in quality send signals ...
In a series of eleven markets, sellers possessed products that were exogenously designated as eithe...
This article belongs to the game theoretic and information economics literature dealing with the pro...
We analyze a competitive labor market in which workers signal their productivities through education...
We study competitive equilibria in a signaling economy with heterogeneously informed buyers. In term...
We study competitive equilibria in a signalling economy with heterogeneously informed buyers. In ter...
We consider a signaling model of the job market in which workers, before choosing their level of edu...
We analyze the Spence education game in experimental markets. We compare a signaling and a screening...
This study considers firms’ coarse information about a worker’s possible types in Spence’s (1973) jo...
Spence (1974a) considered a variant of his signaling model in which there are two types of jobs, and...
This paper analyzes what happens to the Spence signaling model when there is heterogeneity in two di...
The job market signaling model in Spence (1973) deals with a situation of asymmetric information. Wo...
An extensive theoretical literature has developed that investigates the role of promotions as a sign...
Many empirical works suggest that education has a positive effect on earnings not only because it ra...
The job market works under asymmetric information, making it hard for firms to know the real capabil...
We consider a matching model of the labour market where workers that differ in quality send signals ...
In a series of eleven markets, sellers possessed products that were exogenously designated as eithe...
This article belongs to the game theoretic and information economics literature dealing with the pro...