Extending Shapiro and Stiglitz’s (1984) analysis of unemployment as a worker discipline device, we evidence how an economy populated by worker owned firms (WOFs), by overcoming information asymmetry on the employee side in the presence of employer opportunism (as embodied in moral hazard, hidden action and abuse of authority), can decrease, not increase equilibrium wages, while employment is necessarily higher in the presence of WOFs. Within the Shapiro and Stiglitz framework, our analysis evidences that the non-shirking constraint (NSC) for WOFs is lower for any employment and wage level than in investor owned firms (IOFs). By factoring bi-later asymmetric information and opportunism in the employment relation, our model implies that the S...
A firm may reduce its turnover and the entailed turnover costs by raising wages. A rise in unemploym...
The standard explanation of wage rigidity in principal agent and in efficiency wage models is relate...
This paper argues that unemployment insurance increases labor productivity by encouraging workers to...
Extending Shapiro and Stiglitz’s (1984) analysis of unemployment as a worker discipline device, we e...
Extending Shapiro and Stiglitz’s (1984) analysis of unemployment as a worker discipline device, we e...
Worker co-operatives have been shown as characterised by higher wage volatility while providing high...
Shapiro and Stiglitz model on efficiency wages shows that worker owned firms perform higher levels ...
In accordance with the empirical evidence and in contrast with Shapiro and Stiglitz (1984), we demon...
This paper studies the efficient agreements about the dependence of workers' earnings on employment,...
Workers in less-secure jobs are often paid less than identical-looking workers in more secure jobs. ...
Workers in less secure jobs are often paid less than identical-looking workers in more secure jobs....
Stiglitz and Shapiro tackle equilibrium unemployment as a worker discipline device
This paper studies the efficient agreements about the dependence of workers' earnings on employment,...
In the most widely analyzed type of efficiency wage model of involuntary unemployment, firms pay wag...
This paper presents a non-equilibrium, agent-based model of workers and firms, with on-the-job searc...
A firm may reduce its turnover and the entailed turnover costs by raising wages. A rise in unemploym...
The standard explanation of wage rigidity in principal agent and in efficiency wage models is relate...
This paper argues that unemployment insurance increases labor productivity by encouraging workers to...
Extending Shapiro and Stiglitz’s (1984) analysis of unemployment as a worker discipline device, we e...
Extending Shapiro and Stiglitz’s (1984) analysis of unemployment as a worker discipline device, we e...
Worker co-operatives have been shown as characterised by higher wage volatility while providing high...
Shapiro and Stiglitz model on efficiency wages shows that worker owned firms perform higher levels ...
In accordance with the empirical evidence and in contrast with Shapiro and Stiglitz (1984), we demon...
This paper studies the efficient agreements about the dependence of workers' earnings on employment,...
Workers in less-secure jobs are often paid less than identical-looking workers in more secure jobs. ...
Workers in less secure jobs are often paid less than identical-looking workers in more secure jobs....
Stiglitz and Shapiro tackle equilibrium unemployment as a worker discipline device
This paper studies the efficient agreements about the dependence of workers' earnings on employment,...
In the most widely analyzed type of efficiency wage model of involuntary unemployment, firms pay wag...
This paper presents a non-equilibrium, agent-based model of workers and firms, with on-the-job searc...
A firm may reduce its turnover and the entailed turnover costs by raising wages. A rise in unemploym...
The standard explanation of wage rigidity in principal agent and in efficiency wage models is relate...
This paper argues that unemployment insurance increases labor productivity by encouraging workers to...