This paper primarily focuses on how area-specific asymmetries and exogenous shocks influence spatial unemployment disparities. We approach through a model specification with two areas and two categories of workers with different underlying residential site preferences. Workers apply for vacant jobs according to a strategy that maximizes their expected payoffs. Their choices, and the spatial equilibrium solution, depend on wage offers, interarea distances, the time horizon, the spatial distribution of jobs, the unemployment insurance, and costs related to migration and commuting. Through numerical simulation experiments we discuss how such factors influence area-specific unemployment rates and spatial labour market interaction
This article examines unemployment disparities and efficiency in a densely populated economy with tw...
We develop a model for a spatial labor market in which employment is concentrated at discrete points...
A labor market model is developed within an urban spatial context, where it is shown that efficiency...
This paper primarily focuses on how area-specific asymmetries and exogenous shocks influence spatial...
This paper aims to construct a comprehensive model capable of simulating spatial unemployment dispar...
In this paper we build a quantitative spatial general equilibrium model to study the geographical va...
'The authors investigate the rote of spatial frictions in search equilibrium unemployment. For that,...
This paper explores possible reasons for persistent spatial unemployment disparities using agent-bas...
We study the properties of spatial equilibrium in an economy where locations have heterogeneous endo...
By explicitly considering the spatial dimension of local regional labor markets, we develop a simple...
The findings of recent studies on adjustment processes suggest that regional labour markets in the E...
Abstract: Assuming that job search efficiency decreases with distance to jobs, workers’ location in ...
This paper develops a general equilibrium geographical economics model which uses matching frictions...
We introduce a spatial dimension in a search equilibrium unemployment model. By assuming that worker...
<p>People live and work in local markets spatially distinct from one another, yet space is absent fr...
This article examines unemployment disparities and efficiency in a densely populated economy with tw...
We develop a model for a spatial labor market in which employment is concentrated at discrete points...
A labor market model is developed within an urban spatial context, where it is shown that efficiency...
This paper primarily focuses on how area-specific asymmetries and exogenous shocks influence spatial...
This paper aims to construct a comprehensive model capable of simulating spatial unemployment dispar...
In this paper we build a quantitative spatial general equilibrium model to study the geographical va...
'The authors investigate the rote of spatial frictions in search equilibrium unemployment. For that,...
This paper explores possible reasons for persistent spatial unemployment disparities using agent-bas...
We study the properties of spatial equilibrium in an economy where locations have heterogeneous endo...
By explicitly considering the spatial dimension of local regional labor markets, we develop a simple...
The findings of recent studies on adjustment processes suggest that regional labour markets in the E...
Abstract: Assuming that job search efficiency decreases with distance to jobs, workers’ location in ...
This paper develops a general equilibrium geographical economics model which uses matching frictions...
We introduce a spatial dimension in a search equilibrium unemployment model. By assuming that worker...
<p>People live and work in local markets spatially distinct from one another, yet space is absent fr...
This article examines unemployment disparities and efficiency in a densely populated economy with tw...
We develop a model for a spatial labor market in which employment is concentrated at discrete points...
A labor market model is developed within an urban spatial context, where it is shown that efficiency...