We analyse a search model of the labour market in which firms and workers meet bilaterally and negotiate over wages in the presence of private information. We show that a fall in labour market frictions induces more aggressive wage bargaining behaviour, which in turn leads to a costly increase in job insecurity. This adverse insecurity effect can be so large that firms and workers who are in an employment relationship can be made worse off by a fall in labour market frictions. In contrast, firms and workers who are not in an employment relationship and are searching the market for a counterpart are always made better off by such a fall in labour market frictions. We then endogenize the organizational structure of the employment relationship...
Recent research shows that observed labor market flows can be explained in search and matching model...
This paper introduces risk averse workers into a search and matching model and considers the quanti...
Much of the job search literature assumes bilateral meetings between workers and firms. This ignores...
We endogenize separation in a search model of the labor market and allow for bargaining over the con...
There is a popular perception that increased competitive pressures in U.S. product markets are turni...
ABSTRACT Information Frictions and Labor Market Outcomes * We analyze the impact of information fric...
Advances in information technology have improved the job-search process in the labor market. We anal...
This paper analyzes relational contracts in a large anonymous labor market in which both em-ployed a...
The labour market in Europe har for decades now seen a radical shift from traditional full-time labo...
Two essential aspects of many employment relationships are, (1) that they are meant to last a long t...
We analyze a large, anonymous labour market in which firms motivate their workers via relational con...
This paper offers a critical discussion of the concept of labour market rigidity relevant to explain...
Search frictions imply that is costly to find a good partner. As a result the decision to accept a p...
The first chapter discusses the effects of uncertainty shocks on the labour market. Using US data, I...
The central issue of this thesis is the macroeconomic implications of adding frictions to an otherwi...
Recent research shows that observed labor market flows can be explained in search and matching model...
This paper introduces risk averse workers into a search and matching model and considers the quanti...
Much of the job search literature assumes bilateral meetings between workers and firms. This ignores...
We endogenize separation in a search model of the labor market and allow for bargaining over the con...
There is a popular perception that increased competitive pressures in U.S. product markets are turni...
ABSTRACT Information Frictions and Labor Market Outcomes * We analyze the impact of information fric...
Advances in information technology have improved the job-search process in the labor market. We anal...
This paper analyzes relational contracts in a large anonymous labor market in which both em-ployed a...
The labour market in Europe har for decades now seen a radical shift from traditional full-time labo...
Two essential aspects of many employment relationships are, (1) that they are meant to last a long t...
We analyze a large, anonymous labour market in which firms motivate their workers via relational con...
This paper offers a critical discussion of the concept of labour market rigidity relevant to explain...
Search frictions imply that is costly to find a good partner. As a result the decision to accept a p...
The first chapter discusses the effects of uncertainty shocks on the labour market. Using US data, I...
The central issue of this thesis is the macroeconomic implications of adding frictions to an otherwi...
Recent research shows that observed labor market flows can be explained in search and matching model...
This paper introduces risk averse workers into a search and matching model and considers the quanti...
Much of the job search literature assumes bilateral meetings between workers and firms. This ignores...