We present a model that generates empirically plausible price distributions in directed search equilibrium. There are many identical buyers and many identical capacity-constrained sellers who post prices. These prices can be renegotiated to some degree and the outcome depends on the number of buyers who want to purchase the good. In equilibrium all sellers post the same price, demand is randomly distributed, and there is sale price dispersion. Prices and distributions depend on market tightness and on the properties of renegotiation outcomes. In a labor market context, the model generates a strong empirical prediction. If workers can renegotiate the posted wage, then the model predicts a positively skewed and realistic-looking density funct...
We analyse a model of equilibrium directed search in a large labour market. Each worker, observing t...
The directed search model (Peters 52(5):1117–1127, 1984) is static; its dynamic extensions typically...
The economic theory attributes search costs as the cause for price disper-sion. Search costs are muc...
We present a model that generates empirically plausible price distributions in directed search equil...
We present a model that generates empirically plausible price distributions in directed search equil...
We examine how much of the observed wage dispersion among similar workers can be explained as a cons...
This paper studies a bargaining model of equilibrium price distributions. Consumers choose a seller ...
This paper develops a microeconomic model of directed search, where firms are heterogeneous in the n...
International audienceWe propose a search equilibrium model in which homogenous rms post wages alon...
We introduce a directed search model of the labor market where workers send N applications simultane...
We relax restrictions on the storage technology in a prototypical monetary search model to study pri...
We analyze labor market models where the law of one price does not hold-that is, models with equilib...
We relax restrictions on the storage technology in a prototypical monetary search model to study pri...
The directed search model (Peters 52(5):1117-1127, 1984) is static; its dynamic extensions typically...
We examine how much of the observed wage dispersion among similar workers can be explained as a cons...
We analyse a model of equilibrium directed search in a large labour market. Each worker, observing t...
The directed search model (Peters 52(5):1117–1127, 1984) is static; its dynamic extensions typically...
The economic theory attributes search costs as the cause for price disper-sion. Search costs are muc...
We present a model that generates empirically plausible price distributions in directed search equil...
We present a model that generates empirically plausible price distributions in directed search equil...
We examine how much of the observed wage dispersion among similar workers can be explained as a cons...
This paper studies a bargaining model of equilibrium price distributions. Consumers choose a seller ...
This paper develops a microeconomic model of directed search, where firms are heterogeneous in the n...
International audienceWe propose a search equilibrium model in which homogenous rms post wages alon...
We introduce a directed search model of the labor market where workers send N applications simultane...
We relax restrictions on the storage technology in a prototypical monetary search model to study pri...
We analyze labor market models where the law of one price does not hold-that is, models with equilib...
We relax restrictions on the storage technology in a prototypical monetary search model to study pri...
The directed search model (Peters 52(5):1117-1127, 1984) is static; its dynamic extensions typically...
We examine how much of the observed wage dispersion among similar workers can be explained as a cons...
We analyse a model of equilibrium directed search in a large labour market. Each worker, observing t...
The directed search model (Peters 52(5):1117–1127, 1984) is static; its dynamic extensions typically...
The economic theory attributes search costs as the cause for price disper-sion. Search costs are muc...