In 1952, the average quarterly volatility of U.S. state employment growth stood at 1.5 percent. By 1995, employment growth volatility came in at just under 0.5 percent. While all states shared in the decline, some states declined much more dramatically than others. We analyze aspects of this decline using new data covering industry employment by state during the postwar period. Estimates from a pooled cross-section/time-series model corrected for spatial dependence indicate that fluctuations in state-specific and aggregate variables have both played an important role in explaining volatility trends. However, state-level differences in responses to aggregate shocks account for less of the postwar fluctuations in employment growth volatility ...
We examine whether the aggregate U.S. business cycle is driven mainly by geographical" shocks (affec...
Recent literature has found that the US business cycle has experienced a substantial decrease in vol...
Macroeconomic policy discussion in Australia presumes that there was once and for all reduction in t...
Since the middle of the 1980s, economic growth in the U.S. has become much more stable than it was i...
We use US regional and state data to determine which regions have contributed most to the apparent d...
Real average U.S. per capita personal income growth over the last 65 years exceeded a remarkable 400...
The authors analyze employment growth in the metropolitan region and its relationship to employment ...
This paper examines state-level differences in the timing, depth, and total employment effects of th...
Over the course of the recovery from the 2001 recession, many forecasters have revised downward thei...
It is widely believed that regional labour markets in the USA are highly flexible, so that employmen...
This paper studies U.S. nonfarm aggregate and sectoral employment fluctuations by employing the stoc...
It is widely believed that regional labour markets in the USA are highly flexible, so that employmen...
Despite a substantial body of evidence to the contrary, state and local fiscal policy variables loom...
The reduced aggregate volatility that began in 1984 has continued into the new millennium.
This paper presents further evidence on the importance of sectoral shifts by examining unemployment ...
We examine whether the aggregate U.S. business cycle is driven mainly by geographical" shocks (affec...
Recent literature has found that the US business cycle has experienced a substantial decrease in vol...
Macroeconomic policy discussion in Australia presumes that there was once and for all reduction in t...
Since the middle of the 1980s, economic growth in the U.S. has become much more stable than it was i...
We use US regional and state data to determine which regions have contributed most to the apparent d...
Real average U.S. per capita personal income growth over the last 65 years exceeded a remarkable 400...
The authors analyze employment growth in the metropolitan region and its relationship to employment ...
This paper examines state-level differences in the timing, depth, and total employment effects of th...
Over the course of the recovery from the 2001 recession, many forecasters have revised downward thei...
It is widely believed that regional labour markets in the USA are highly flexible, so that employmen...
This paper studies U.S. nonfarm aggregate and sectoral employment fluctuations by employing the stoc...
It is widely believed that regional labour markets in the USA are highly flexible, so that employmen...
Despite a substantial body of evidence to the contrary, state and local fiscal policy variables loom...
The reduced aggregate volatility that began in 1984 has continued into the new millennium.
This paper presents further evidence on the importance of sectoral shifts by examining unemployment ...
We examine whether the aggregate U.S. business cycle is driven mainly by geographical" shocks (affec...
Recent literature has found that the US business cycle has experienced a substantial decrease in vol...
Macroeconomic policy discussion in Australia presumes that there was once and for all reduction in t...