We study the influence of social networks on labour market transitions. We develop the first model where social ties and job status co-evolve through time. Our key assumption is that the probability of formation of a new tie is greater between two employed individuals than between an employed and an unemployed individual. We show that this assumption generates negative duration dependence of exit rates from unemployment. Our model has a number of novel testable implications. For instance, we show that a higher connectivity among unemployed individuals reduces duration dependence and that exit rates depend positively on the duration of the last job held by the unemployed worker.duration dependence; economic inbreeding; social capital; social...
Debates centered on the role of social networks as a determinant of labour market outcomes have a lo...
This study contributes to exploration and understanding of the role of social context in economic ou...
Popular accounts in both social science and society claim that unemployment goes together with socia...
We study the influence of social networks on labor market transitions. We develop the first model wh...
We develop a model where agents obtain information about job opportunities through an explicitly mod...
What is the effect of social networks on labor market outcomes? The tradition following Grannovetter...
We use the UK Quarterly Labour Force Survey to document the presence of two phenomena. First, a posi...
I develop an equilibrium model of endogenous network formation. In my model workers differ in their ...
We present a model of labor markets that accounts for the social network through which agents hear a...
Empirical studies of labor markets show that social contacts are an important source of job-related ...
We develop a model where agents obtain information about job opportunities through an explicitly mod...
This paper examines the dynamic implications of social networks for the labour market outcomes of re...
In this paper we study the effects of job contact networks on out-of-unemployment transitions. We fi...
In this paper we adopt the probabilistic framework of Calv´o-Armengol and Jackson (2004) to study th...
In this paper we study the effects of job contact networks on out-of-unemployment transitions. We fi...
Debates centered on the role of social networks as a determinant of labour market outcomes have a lo...
This study contributes to exploration and understanding of the role of social context in economic ou...
Popular accounts in both social science and society claim that unemployment goes together with socia...
We study the influence of social networks on labor market transitions. We develop the first model wh...
We develop a model where agents obtain information about job opportunities through an explicitly mod...
What is the effect of social networks on labor market outcomes? The tradition following Grannovetter...
We use the UK Quarterly Labour Force Survey to document the presence of two phenomena. First, a posi...
I develop an equilibrium model of endogenous network formation. In my model workers differ in their ...
We present a model of labor markets that accounts for the social network through which agents hear a...
Empirical studies of labor markets show that social contacts are an important source of job-related ...
We develop a model where agents obtain information about job opportunities through an explicitly mod...
This paper examines the dynamic implications of social networks for the labour market outcomes of re...
In this paper we study the effects of job contact networks on out-of-unemployment transitions. We fi...
In this paper we adopt the probabilistic framework of Calv´o-Armengol and Jackson (2004) to study th...
In this paper we study the effects of job contact networks on out-of-unemployment transitions. We fi...
Debates centered on the role of social networks as a determinant of labour market outcomes have a lo...
This study contributes to exploration and understanding of the role of social context in economic ou...
Popular accounts in both social science and society claim that unemployment goes together with socia...