This paper re-examines Lilien’s sectoral shifts hypothesis for U.S. unemployment. We employ a monthly panel that spans from 1990:01 to 2011:12 for 48 U.S. states. Panel unit root tests that allow for crosssectional dependence reveal the stationarity of unemployment. Within a framework that takes into account dynamics, parameter heterogeneity and cross-sectional dependence in the panel, we show that sectoral reallocation is significant not only at the aggregate level but also at the state level. The magnitude and the statistical significance of the latter as measured by Lilien’s index increases when both heterogeneity and cross-sectional dependence are taken into account
This paper studies the transmission of monetary shocks to state unemployment rates, within a novel s...
We analyze a 1960-96 panel of OECD countries to explain why the US moved from relatively high to rel...
Considerable labor mobility exists across US states, enough that, if migration arbitrages local unem...
This paper re-examines Lilien’s sectoral shifts hypothesis for U.S. unemployment. We employ a monthl...
This paper revisits the sectoral shifts hypothesis by examining unemployment fluctuations for 48 U.S...
This paper re-examines Lilien’s sectoral shifts hypothesis for U.S. unemployment. We employ a monthl...
This article revisits the sectoral shifts hypothesis by examining unemployment fluctuations for 48 U...
We explore the macroeconomic effects of sectoral shifts for 15 European countries. An extensive pane...
We explore the macroeconomic effects of sectoral shifts for a set of 15 European countries. An exten...
This paper critically appraises the approaches that have characterized the literature on the macroec...
This study revisits the sectoral shifts hypothesis for the US for the period 1948 to 2011. A quantil...
We explore the long-run relationship between the unemployment rate and the labor force participation...
This study revisits Lilien’s sectoral shifts hypothesis for the US. We employ quantile regression es...
Sectoral shifts of labor demand can have significant effects on aggregate rate and duration of unemplo...
This study revisits Lilien’s sectoral shifts hypothesis for the US. We employ quantile regression es...
This paper studies the transmission of monetary shocks to state unemployment rates, within a novel s...
We analyze a 1960-96 panel of OECD countries to explain why the US moved from relatively high to rel...
Considerable labor mobility exists across US states, enough that, if migration arbitrages local unem...
This paper re-examines Lilien’s sectoral shifts hypothesis for U.S. unemployment. We employ a monthl...
This paper revisits the sectoral shifts hypothesis by examining unemployment fluctuations for 48 U.S...
This paper re-examines Lilien’s sectoral shifts hypothesis for U.S. unemployment. We employ a monthl...
This article revisits the sectoral shifts hypothesis by examining unemployment fluctuations for 48 U...
We explore the macroeconomic effects of sectoral shifts for 15 European countries. An extensive pane...
We explore the macroeconomic effects of sectoral shifts for a set of 15 European countries. An exten...
This paper critically appraises the approaches that have characterized the literature on the macroec...
This study revisits the sectoral shifts hypothesis for the US for the period 1948 to 2011. A quantil...
We explore the long-run relationship between the unemployment rate and the labor force participation...
This study revisits Lilien’s sectoral shifts hypothesis for the US. We employ quantile regression es...
Sectoral shifts of labor demand can have significant effects on aggregate rate and duration of unemplo...
This study revisits Lilien’s sectoral shifts hypothesis for the US. We employ quantile regression es...
This paper studies the transmission of monetary shocks to state unemployment rates, within a novel s...
We analyze a 1960-96 panel of OECD countries to explain why the US moved from relatively high to rel...
Considerable labor mobility exists across US states, enough that, if migration arbitrages local unem...