In the Lucas-Rapping (1969) model of the labour market, fluctuations in unemployment represent individuals optimally adjusting their labour supply behaviour in response to fluctuations in wage rates over the business cycle. In this paper I propose and implement a misspecification test of the Lucas-Rapping treatment of unemployment as labour supply behaviour using panel data. This test extends previous such work with micro data by simultaneously allowing for intertemporal substitution, uncertainty and endogenous unemployment. Using the standard specification of intertemporallabour supply behaviour, I find strong evidence against this interpre-tation of unemployment. There are two possible interpretations of the test results. The first is tha...
T he state of the labor market, employment and unemployment, playsan important role in the deliberat...
The first essay uses the Continuous Wage and Benefit History (CWBH) data base to evaluate the effect...
This thesis comprises five chapters which are all concerned with the general theme of sectoral shock...
A new methodology is described which tests between various equilibrium theories of unemployment usin...
A new methodology is described which tests between various equilibrium theories of unemployment usin...
It is now more than fifteen years since Lucas and Rapping (LR) first published their influential pap...
According to the intertemporal-substitution hypothesis, which underlies the typical empirical real b...
We present new tests of three theories of the labor market: intertemporal substitu-tion, hours restr...
The change in the relationship between unemployment and vacancies in Great Britain has produced diff...
This paper provides new evidence on unemployment durations for individuals in Great Britain using a ...
We propose a new VAR identification scheme that enables us to disentangle labour supply shocks from ...
This paper concerns the estimation of an intertemporal model for labour supply and consumption that ...
This paper evaluates two theories of unemployment: the natural rate theory (whereby unemployment is ...
Recent analyses of unemployment-vacancy series suggest that aggregate shocks, rather than sectoral s...
We build an analytically and computationally tractable stochastic equilibrium model of unemployment ...
T he state of the labor market, employment and unemployment, playsan important role in the deliberat...
The first essay uses the Continuous Wage and Benefit History (CWBH) data base to evaluate the effect...
This thesis comprises five chapters which are all concerned with the general theme of sectoral shock...
A new methodology is described which tests between various equilibrium theories of unemployment usin...
A new methodology is described which tests between various equilibrium theories of unemployment usin...
It is now more than fifteen years since Lucas and Rapping (LR) first published their influential pap...
According to the intertemporal-substitution hypothesis, which underlies the typical empirical real b...
We present new tests of three theories of the labor market: intertemporal substitu-tion, hours restr...
The change in the relationship between unemployment and vacancies in Great Britain has produced diff...
This paper provides new evidence on unemployment durations for individuals in Great Britain using a ...
We propose a new VAR identification scheme that enables us to disentangle labour supply shocks from ...
This paper concerns the estimation of an intertemporal model for labour supply and consumption that ...
This paper evaluates two theories of unemployment: the natural rate theory (whereby unemployment is ...
Recent analyses of unemployment-vacancy series suggest that aggregate shocks, rather than sectoral s...
We build an analytically and computationally tractable stochastic equilibrium model of unemployment ...
T he state of the labor market, employment and unemployment, playsan important role in the deliberat...
The first essay uses the Continuous Wage and Benefit History (CWBH) data base to evaluate the effect...
This thesis comprises five chapters which are all concerned with the general theme of sectoral shock...