© 2019 Elsevier B.V. Using a laboratory experiment we examine how social comparisons affect behavior in a sequential search task. In a control treatment subjects search in isolation, while in two other treatments subjects get feedback on the search decisions and outcomes of a partner subject. The average level and rate of decline of reservation wages are similar across treatments. Nevertheless, subjects who are able to make social comparisons search differently from those who search in isolation. Within a search task we observe a reference wage effect: when a partner exits, the subject chooses a new reservation wage which is increasing in partner income. We also observe a social comparison effect between search tasks: subjects whose partner...
While widely accepted models of labor market search imply a constant reservation wage policy, the em...
We use recruitment into a laboratory experiment to analyze how job networks select indi-viduals for ...
We explore whether employees compare their pay to the pay of others in a similarly prestigious occup...
This thesis contains three studies on the topic of labour market search. Chapter 1 provides an overv...
Research on the behavior of job seekers has been extensive in the economics discipline. In more rece...
In this paper we analyze the relationship between social networks and the job search behavior of une...
Search frictions impede the labor market. Despite this indisputable fact, it is a priori unclear how...
Social comparisons are important in the employment sphere. A “culture of unemployment” may evolve an...
We use individual data for Great Britain over the period 1992-2009 to compare the probability that e...
We study how job seekers respond to wage announcements by assigning wages randomly to pairs of other...
Zaharieva A. Double Matching: Social Contacts in a Labour Market with On-the-Job Search. Working Pap...
We used an experimental approach to test if there is a link between positional preferences and the s...
This paper examines how four components of the job search process--the choice of search method...
This paper examines how four components of the job search process influence the job-finding rate. A ...
Using a large-scale real effort experiment, we explore whether and how different peer assignment mec...
While widely accepted models of labor market search imply a constant reservation wage policy, the em...
We use recruitment into a laboratory experiment to analyze how job networks select indi-viduals for ...
We explore whether employees compare their pay to the pay of others in a similarly prestigious occup...
This thesis contains three studies on the topic of labour market search. Chapter 1 provides an overv...
Research on the behavior of job seekers has been extensive in the economics discipline. In more rece...
In this paper we analyze the relationship between social networks and the job search behavior of une...
Search frictions impede the labor market. Despite this indisputable fact, it is a priori unclear how...
Social comparisons are important in the employment sphere. A “culture of unemployment” may evolve an...
We use individual data for Great Britain over the period 1992-2009 to compare the probability that e...
We study how job seekers respond to wage announcements by assigning wages randomly to pairs of other...
Zaharieva A. Double Matching: Social Contacts in a Labour Market with On-the-Job Search. Working Pap...
We used an experimental approach to test if there is a link between positional preferences and the s...
This paper examines how four components of the job search process--the choice of search method...
This paper examines how four components of the job search process influence the job-finding rate. A ...
Using a large-scale real effort experiment, we explore whether and how different peer assignment mec...
While widely accepted models of labor market search imply a constant reservation wage policy, the em...
We use recruitment into a laboratory experiment to analyze how job networks select indi-viduals for ...
We explore whether employees compare their pay to the pay of others in a similarly prestigious occup...