We demonstrate that policies aimed at reducing frictional unemployment may lead to the opposite results. In a labor market with long-term wage contracts and moral hazard, any such policy reduces employees’ opportunity costs of staying on a job. As employees are less worried about losing their job, a smaller share of employees is willing to exert effort, leading to a lower average productivity. Consequently, firms create fewer vacancies, resulting in lower employment and decreased welfare.PostprintPeer reviewe
This dissertation presents three different contributions on Job Search Models attempting to identify...
The existing literature assumes that unemployment insurance (UI) affects the labor market through th...
In the last three decades, active labor market policies have gained a higher share of the total spen...
This article studies a competitive search model of the labor market with learning about match-specif...
This thesis is comprised of three independent chapters. The first two chapters investigate the effec...
We develop a search-and-matching model where the magnitude of unemployment insurance benefits affect...
The costs of searching for a job vacancy are typically associated with fric-tion that deters or dela...
This paper characterizes the optimal policy within a dynamic search model of the labor market with r...
This paper provides a review of the recent literature on how incentives in unemployment insurance (U...
Existing unemployment insurance systems in many OECD countries involve a ceiling on insurable earnin...
This paper presents a theoretical model to show that in sectors where workers invest in firm specifi...
This dissertation consists of two essays that study the efficiency gains from profiling of jobless w...
Unemployment insurance schemes face a well-known trade-off between providing income support to those...
seminar participants at Georgetown University and LaCEa 2003 and an anonymous referee for valuable c...
Over the past several decades, the rate at which regular unemployment insurance recipients run out o...
This dissertation presents three different contributions on Job Search Models attempting to identify...
The existing literature assumes that unemployment insurance (UI) affects the labor market through th...
In the last three decades, active labor market policies have gained a higher share of the total spen...
This article studies a competitive search model of the labor market with learning about match-specif...
This thesis is comprised of three independent chapters. The first two chapters investigate the effec...
We develop a search-and-matching model where the magnitude of unemployment insurance benefits affect...
The costs of searching for a job vacancy are typically associated with fric-tion that deters or dela...
This paper characterizes the optimal policy within a dynamic search model of the labor market with r...
This paper provides a review of the recent literature on how incentives in unemployment insurance (U...
Existing unemployment insurance systems in many OECD countries involve a ceiling on insurable earnin...
This paper presents a theoretical model to show that in sectors where workers invest in firm specifi...
This dissertation consists of two essays that study the efficiency gains from profiling of jobless w...
Unemployment insurance schemes face a well-known trade-off between providing income support to those...
seminar participants at Georgetown University and LaCEa 2003 and an anonymous referee for valuable c...
Over the past several decades, the rate at which regular unemployment insurance recipients run out o...
This dissertation presents three different contributions on Job Search Models attempting to identify...
The existing literature assumes that unemployment insurance (UI) affects the labor market through th...
In the last three decades, active labor market policies have gained a higher share of the total spen...