This paper tests economic impacts of labor market institutions on employment of OECD nations from the perspective of long-term unemployment rate (LUR) in order to alleviate endogeneity bias existed in the current literature on this topic, which is the root of the long-lasting debate over significance of these effects. Based on careful analysis of the model specifications of past literature, a set of models with dependent variable of LUR are subject to various robustness tests and compared with other models in literature, policy simulation is then conducted based on the best specification after these tests. We find that some institutions, particularly tax wedge, union density and their interaction do affect LUR, which has profound implicatio...
web-site: http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/48/61/38697056.pdfInternational audienceThis paper explores t...
The thesis consists of three papers, summarized as follows. "The Determinants of Labour Marke...
The development of the unemployment rate di¤ers substantially between OECD countries.In this paper w...
The view that unemployment is caused by labor market rigidities and should be addressed through syst...
In the last twenty five years, there has been a sharp divergence in trends in the unemployment rate ...
International organizations and mainstream economists have consistently promoted the view that labou...
This paper aims to investigate the determinants of OECD unemployment from 1960 to 1995 with a specia...
The main channel through which labour market institutions are supposed to work in affecting unemploy...
In recent years some OECD countries were successful in lowering the unemployment rate substantially ...
'The development of the unemployment rate differs substantially between OECD countries. In recent ye...
This article provides the first comprehensive test of the frequent, sharply differing market liberal...
The development of the unemployment rate differs substantially between OECD countries. In recent yea...
In the last twenty five years, there has been a sharp divergence in trends in the unemployment rate ...
This paper re-examines the impacts an institutional arrangement may have on labour market outcomes s...
The fight against unemployment has become one of the most important challenges that advanced Europea...
web-site: http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/48/61/38697056.pdfInternational audienceThis paper explores t...
The thesis consists of three papers, summarized as follows. "The Determinants of Labour Marke...
The development of the unemployment rate di¤ers substantially between OECD countries.In this paper w...
The view that unemployment is caused by labor market rigidities and should be addressed through syst...
In the last twenty five years, there has been a sharp divergence in trends in the unemployment rate ...
International organizations and mainstream economists have consistently promoted the view that labou...
This paper aims to investigate the determinants of OECD unemployment from 1960 to 1995 with a specia...
The main channel through which labour market institutions are supposed to work in affecting unemploy...
In recent years some OECD countries were successful in lowering the unemployment rate substantially ...
'The development of the unemployment rate differs substantially between OECD countries. In recent ye...
This article provides the first comprehensive test of the frequent, sharply differing market liberal...
The development of the unemployment rate differs substantially between OECD countries. In recent yea...
In the last twenty five years, there has been a sharp divergence in trends in the unemployment rate ...
This paper re-examines the impacts an institutional arrangement may have on labour market outcomes s...
The fight against unemployment has become one of the most important challenges that advanced Europea...
web-site: http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/48/61/38697056.pdfInternational audienceThis paper explores t...
The thesis consists of three papers, summarized as follows. "The Determinants of Labour Marke...
The development of the unemployment rate di¤ers substantially between OECD countries.In this paper w...