The present article develops a search and matching framework to model political nepotism in the job market. The model argues that labor market friction generates incentives for the political leaders to provide nepotism under a democratic set up. Both the leaders optimally choose nepotism when the labor market friction is higher. It is shown that even for a relatively lesser labor market friction at least one leader would always choose nepotism. The results of the basic model remain robust in an extension where followers can pay a price and choose their allegiance, to any one of the political parties
This dissertation presents three different contributions on Job Search Models attempting to identify...
When do politicians in developing democracies prioritize meritocratic recruitment over patronage hir...
We develop a framework to empirically examine how politicians with electoral pressures control burea...
The present article develops a search and matching framework to model political nepotism in the job ...
We set up a model with search and matching frictions to understand the effects of employment and wag...
We extend the research on nepotism in public institutions by first investigating the determinants of...
Governments in both developing and developed economies play an active role in labor markets in the f...
We extend the benchmark model of DMP in a two-sector general equilibrium framework by introducing a ...
Chapter 1 develops a model of the labor market that can account for the following facts. The duratio...
This dissertation is composed of three essays using labor search models to explore the role of skill...
In this paper we extend the benchmark model of Diamond-Mortensen-Pissarides in a two-sector general ...
This dissertation focuses on explaining the cyclicality of unemployment, job vacancies, job creation...
We study how political intermediation in the labor market interacts with search frictions. Politicia...
This paper examines a framework in which politicians can decrease unemployment via active labor mark...
Nepotism is often condemned, but little is known about what people construe as nepotism, and why it ...
This dissertation presents three different contributions on Job Search Models attempting to identify...
When do politicians in developing democracies prioritize meritocratic recruitment over patronage hir...
We develop a framework to empirically examine how politicians with electoral pressures control burea...
The present article develops a search and matching framework to model political nepotism in the job ...
We set up a model with search and matching frictions to understand the effects of employment and wag...
We extend the research on nepotism in public institutions by first investigating the determinants of...
Governments in both developing and developed economies play an active role in labor markets in the f...
We extend the benchmark model of DMP in a two-sector general equilibrium framework by introducing a ...
Chapter 1 develops a model of the labor market that can account for the following facts. The duratio...
This dissertation is composed of three essays using labor search models to explore the role of skill...
In this paper we extend the benchmark model of Diamond-Mortensen-Pissarides in a two-sector general ...
This dissertation focuses on explaining the cyclicality of unemployment, job vacancies, job creation...
We study how political intermediation in the labor market interacts with search frictions. Politicia...
This paper examines a framework in which politicians can decrease unemployment via active labor mark...
Nepotism is often condemned, but little is known about what people construe as nepotism, and why it ...
This dissertation presents three different contributions on Job Search Models attempting to identify...
When do politicians in developing democracies prioritize meritocratic recruitment over patronage hir...
We develop a framework to empirically examine how politicians with electoral pressures control burea...