This article contributes to the debate on the causes of unemployment in interwar Germany. It applies the Layard-Nickell model of the labor market to interwar data. The results indicate that demand shocks, combined with nominal inertia in the labor market, were important in explaining unemployment. Real wage pressures due to procedures for wage determination were a major influence on unemployment, but were partly offset by movements in other supply-side variables, such as the replacement ratio and the pricing policy of cartels. Demand- and supply-side variables were mutually reinforcing in the Great Depression and in the recovery under the Nazis.© The Economic History Association. All rights reserved
World War I (WWI) causes irreversible consequences on the British economy, and Britain has experienc...
World War I (WWI) causes irreversible consequences on the British economy, and Britain has experienc...
This paper introduces an empirical model of the French interwar labour market that is comparable to ...
This paper examines the factors contributing to the rise in unemployment in Australia during the dep...
This article estimates the matching function of the British labour market for the period of 1921-193...
This article estimates the matching function of the British labour market for the period of 1921-193...
This article estimates the matching function of the British labour market for the period of 1921-193...
This paper analyzes the Swedish labor market during the interwar and early postwar period within the...
This paper links together separate national debates on the role of real wages in high unemployment i...
This thesis deals with employment policy in Nazi Germany from 1933 to 1939. The focus is mainly on p...
This publication is with permission of the rights owner freely accessible due to an Alliance licence...
This publication is with permission of the rights owner freely accessible due to an Alliance licence...
The Great Depression is to economics what the Big Bang is to physics. Asan event, the Depression is ...
This paper links together separate national debates on the role of real wages in high unemployment i...
This paper links together separate national debates on the role of real wages in high unemployment i...
World War I (WWI) causes irreversible consequences on the British economy, and Britain has experienc...
World War I (WWI) causes irreversible consequences on the British economy, and Britain has experienc...
This paper introduces an empirical model of the French interwar labour market that is comparable to ...
This paper examines the factors contributing to the rise in unemployment in Australia during the dep...
This article estimates the matching function of the British labour market for the period of 1921-193...
This article estimates the matching function of the British labour market for the period of 1921-193...
This article estimates the matching function of the British labour market for the period of 1921-193...
This paper analyzes the Swedish labor market during the interwar and early postwar period within the...
This paper links together separate national debates on the role of real wages in high unemployment i...
This thesis deals with employment policy in Nazi Germany from 1933 to 1939. The focus is mainly on p...
This publication is with permission of the rights owner freely accessible due to an Alliance licence...
This publication is with permission of the rights owner freely accessible due to an Alliance licence...
The Great Depression is to economics what the Big Bang is to physics. Asan event, the Depression is ...
This paper links together separate national debates on the role of real wages in high unemployment i...
This paper links together separate national debates on the role of real wages in high unemployment i...
World War I (WWI) causes irreversible consequences on the British economy, and Britain has experienc...
World War I (WWI) causes irreversible consequences on the British economy, and Britain has experienc...
This paper introduces an empirical model of the French interwar labour market that is comparable to ...