In this work we focus on the British labour force, using data from the BHPS (British Household Panel Survey). The goal is to examine whether there are statistically significant differences between the unemployed and those out of the labour force in the transition rate into employment. Using logistic regression for a pooled cross section time series sample we are able to define 4 different groups: Seeking Out of Work, Attached Out of Work, Unemployed Not Seeking, and Voluntary Out of Work. We find that these groups are characterised by very different transition rates into employment, which cannot be explained simply by the active search for a job.
This paper is concerned with the matching of job searchers with vacant jobs: a key component of the ...
This paper tests the appropriateness of government employment policies in targeting specific groups ...
What affects the probability that an individual who has just entered unemployment finds employment w...
In this work we focus on the British labour force, using data from the BHPS (British Household Pane...
We use the British Household Panel Survey (BHPS) to analyse whether employed and unemployed job seek...
We use data from the Labour Force Survey to show that employed and unemployed job seekers in Great B...
This paper first argues for a new approach to researching the issue of unemployment and work attitud...
Recent evidence suggests that unemployment benefit recipients search more extensively than non-recip...
This paper provides a set of simple, yet overlooked, facts regarding on-the-job search and job-to-jo...
There is a great interest in Britain in the extent to which there exist a ‘low pay/no pay cycle’. Th...
The job search literature suggests that on-the-job search reduces the probability of un employed peo...
The labour market status of many non-working persons is at the boundary between unem-ployment and in...
Most immigrant groups experience higher rates of unemployment than the host countries native populat...
In this empirical paper, we assess how social exclusion arises in the context of labour market trans...
This paper provides an analysis of the incidence of unemployment in Britain between 1979 and 1986. U...
This paper is concerned with the matching of job searchers with vacant jobs: a key component of the ...
This paper tests the appropriateness of government employment policies in targeting specific groups ...
What affects the probability that an individual who has just entered unemployment finds employment w...
In this work we focus on the British labour force, using data from the BHPS (British Household Pane...
We use the British Household Panel Survey (BHPS) to analyse whether employed and unemployed job seek...
We use data from the Labour Force Survey to show that employed and unemployed job seekers in Great B...
This paper first argues for a new approach to researching the issue of unemployment and work attitud...
Recent evidence suggests that unemployment benefit recipients search more extensively than non-recip...
This paper provides a set of simple, yet overlooked, facts regarding on-the-job search and job-to-jo...
There is a great interest in Britain in the extent to which there exist a ‘low pay/no pay cycle’. Th...
The job search literature suggests that on-the-job search reduces the probability of un employed peo...
The labour market status of many non-working persons is at the boundary between unem-ployment and in...
Most immigrant groups experience higher rates of unemployment than the host countries native populat...
In this empirical paper, we assess how social exclusion arises in the context of labour market trans...
This paper provides an analysis of the incidence of unemployment in Britain between 1979 and 1986. U...
This paper is concerned with the matching of job searchers with vacant jobs: a key component of the ...
This paper tests the appropriateness of government employment policies in targeting specific groups ...
What affects the probability that an individual who has just entered unemployment finds employment w...