The Todaro Paradox states that policies aimed at reducing urban unemployment are bound to backfire: they will raise rather than reduce urban unemployment. The aim of this paper is to reexamine this paradox in the context of efficiency wage and search-matching models. For that, we study a policy that consists in decreasing the urban unemployment benefit. In an efficiency wage model, we find that there is no Todaro paradox while this is not always true in a search-matching model since a decrease in the urban unemployment benefit can increase both urban employment and unemployment.Efficiency Wages; Search-Matching; Rural-Urban Migration; Policy
We develop a model in which workers ’ search efficiency is negatively affected by access to jobs. Wo...
The purpose of this paper is to examine the Fields (1989) proposition1 in a multi sector general equ...
Relying on the non-negligible role played by the underground economy in the labour market fluctuatio...
This paper presents a version of the Harris-Todaro model in which the rural labour market is charact...
Low and middle income countries frequently have a substantial informal sector within large cities. I...
We develop a search-matching model with rural-urban migration and an explicit land market. Wages, jo...
The Harris-Todaro hypothesis replaces the equality of wages by the equality of ‘expected’ wages as t...
We reconsider the effect of economic development on urban unemployment by introducing households wit...
This paper adds a land market to a standard Harris-Todaro framework. In the standard model, the equi...
Recently, Pissarides (2008) has argued that the standard search model with sunk fixed matching costs...
Some important effects of government policies on urban labor productivity are absent from Harris and...
This note presents a formula for the equilibrium ratio of the number of urban job seekers to the num...
This paper develops a solvable general equilibrium agglomeration model, where search frictions for l...
We develop a search-matching model with rural-urban migration and an explicit land market. Wages, jo...
Should public investment be targeted to big cities or to small towns, if the objective is to minimiz...
We develop a model in which workers ’ search efficiency is negatively affected by access to jobs. Wo...
The purpose of this paper is to examine the Fields (1989) proposition1 in a multi sector general equ...
Relying on the non-negligible role played by the underground economy in the labour market fluctuatio...
This paper presents a version of the Harris-Todaro model in which the rural labour market is charact...
Low and middle income countries frequently have a substantial informal sector within large cities. I...
We develop a search-matching model with rural-urban migration and an explicit land market. Wages, jo...
The Harris-Todaro hypothesis replaces the equality of wages by the equality of ‘expected’ wages as t...
We reconsider the effect of economic development on urban unemployment by introducing households wit...
This paper adds a land market to a standard Harris-Todaro framework. In the standard model, the equi...
Recently, Pissarides (2008) has argued that the standard search model with sunk fixed matching costs...
Some important effects of government policies on urban labor productivity are absent from Harris and...
This note presents a formula for the equilibrium ratio of the number of urban job seekers to the num...
This paper develops a solvable general equilibrium agglomeration model, where search frictions for l...
We develop a search-matching model with rural-urban migration and an explicit land market. Wages, jo...
Should public investment be targeted to big cities or to small towns, if the objective is to minimiz...
We develop a model in which workers ’ search efficiency is negatively affected by access to jobs. Wo...
The purpose of this paper is to examine the Fields (1989) proposition1 in a multi sector general equ...
Relying on the non-negligible role played by the underground economy in the labour market fluctuatio...