Labour Economics
1993 - 2025
Current editor(s): A. Ichino From Elsevier Bibliographic data for series maintained by Catherine Liu (repec@elsevier.com). Access Statistics for this journal.
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Volume 7, issue 6, 2000
- Parenthood and the earnings of married men and women pp. 689-710

- Shelly Lundberg and Elaina Rose
- Intersectoral labour reallocations and unemployment in Italy pp. 711-728

- Paolo Garonna and Francesca G. M. Sica
- The effect of the minimum wage on employment and hours pp. 729-750

- Madeline Zavodny
- Some deadweight losses from the minimum wage: the cases of full and partial compliance pp. 751-783

- Filip Palda
- Reapplication and extension: intergenerational mobility in the United States pp. 785-796

- Alison Aughinbaugh
Volume 7, issue 5, 2000
- Editor's note pp. 463-469

- Peter Kuhn
- Self-employment in OECD countries pp. 471-505

- David Blanchflower
- Taxes, economic conditions and recent trends in male self-employment: a Canada-US comparison pp. 507-544

- Herbert Schuetze
- Effects of the United States tax system on transitions into self-employment pp. 545-574

- Donald Bruce
- Business start-ups or disguised unemployment? Evidence on the character of self-employment from transition economies pp. 575-601

- John Earle and Zuzana Sakova
- Pushed out or pulled in? Self-employment among ethnic minorities in England and Wales pp. 603-628

- Ken Clark and Stephen Drinkwater
- Business start-ups by the unemployed -- an econometric analysis based on firm data pp. 629-663

- Friedhelm Pfeiffer and Frank Reize
- Consequences of self-employment for women and men in the United States pp. 665-687

- Donald Williams
Volume 7, issue 4, 2000
- The sale of relational capital through tenure profiles and tournaments pp. 373-384

- Paul Frijters
- Relative deprivation in rank-order tournaments pp. 385-407

- Matthias Krakel
- An examination of cross-country differences in the gender gap in labor force participation rates pp. 409-426

- Heather Antecol
- The impact of welfare reform on labour supply behaviour in New Zealand pp. 427-448

- Tim Maloney
- Verifiable wage offers and recontracting: effect on wage and consumption profiles pp. 449-462

- Kit-Chun Lam and Pak-Wai Liu
Volume 7, issue 3, 2000
- Short-term or long-term labor contracts pp. 249-260

- Juan Bárcena-Ruiz and María Luz Campo
- Endogenous scope of bargaining in a union-oligopoly model: when will firms and unions bargain over employment? pp. 261-281

- Emmanuel Petrakis and Minas Vlassis
- On the structure of unemployment benefits in shirking models pp. 283-295

- Laszlo Goerke
- A model of labour supply with job offer restrictions pp. 297-312

- Hans Bloemen
- Monopsonistic competition for the "best" workers1 pp. 313-334

- Fabio Fiorillo, Stefano Santacroce and Stefano Staffolani
- Ambiguous effects of tax progressivity -- theory and Danish evidence pp. 335-347

- Claus Thustrup Hansen, Lars Haagen Pedersen and Torsten Slok
- Commitment and strikes in wage bargaining pp. 349-372

- Vicente Calabuig and Gonzalo Olcina
Volume 7, issue 2, 2000
- From Bismarck to Maastricht: The March to European Union and the Labor Compact1 pp. 117-134

- Alan Krueger
- Matching and competition for human capital pp. 135-152

- David Scoones
- Spell durations with long unemployment insurance periods pp. 153-180

- Espen Bratberg and Kjell Vaage
- What effect does uncertainty have on the length of labor contracts? pp. 181-201

- Kevin J. Murphy
- Wage differentials between the public and the private sectors: evidence from an economy in transition pp. 203-224

- Vera A. Adamchik and Arjun Bedi
- The effect of strike replacement legislation on employment pp. 225-247

- John Budd
Volume 7, issue 1, 2000
- Returns to firm-provided training: evidence from French worker-firm matched data1 pp. 1-19

- Dominique Goux and Eric Maurin
- The effects of unemployment insurance on postunemployment earnings pp. 21-53

- John Addison and McKinley Blackburn
- The labor market effects of non-wage compensations pp. 55-78

- Masanori Hashimoto and Jingang Zhao
- Is tax progression really good for employment? A model with endogenous hours of work pp. 79-93

- Clemens Fuest and Bernd Huber
- Wage bargaining and turnover costs with heterogeneous labor and asymmetric information1 pp. 95-116

- Jon Strand
Volume 6, issue 4, 1999
- A review of estimates of the schooling/earnings relationship, with tests for publication bias pp. 453-470

- Orley Ashenfelter, Colm Harmon and Hessel Oosterbeek
- Estimates of the return to schooling in Sweden from a large sample of twins pp. 471-489

- Gunnar Isacsson
- Estimating the returns to education for Australian youth via rank-order instrumental variables pp. 491-507

- Sarah Rummery, Francis Vella and Marno Verbeek
- The economic returns to schooling for Italian men. An evaluation based on instrumental variables1 pp. 509-519

- Giorgio Brunello and Raffaele Miniaci
- Instrumenting education and the returns to schooling in the Netherlands pp. 521-534

- Jesse Levin and Erik Plug
- Returns to education in Portugal pp. 535-541

- José Vieira
- The economic return to schooling in Ireland pp. 543-550

- Tim Callan and Colm Harmon
- The effects of families and ability on men's education and earnings in Britain1 pp. 551-567

- Lorraine Dearden
- Return to education in Finland pp. 569-580

- Roope Uusitalo
- Education and wages in the Czech and Slovak Republics during transition pp. 581-593

- Randall Filer, Stepan Jurajda and Jan Planovsky
Volume 6, issue 3, 1999
- On the effectiveness of firing costs1 pp. 335-354

- Yu-Fu Chen and Gylfi Zoega
- A trade union model with endogenous militancy: interpreting the French case pp. 355-373

- Damien Besancenot and Radu Vranceanu
- Educational presorting and occupational segregation pp. 375-395

- Lex Borghans and Loek Groot
- Wage bargaining, union membership, and the organization of unemployment insurance pp. 397-415

- Bertil Holmlund and Per Lundborg
- Were there no returns to education in the USSR? Estimates from Soviet-period household data pp. 417-434

- Katarina Katz
- Optimal tax progressivity in imperfect labour markets pp. 435-452

- Peter Birch Sorensen
Volume 6, issue 2, 1999
- Theory confronts data: how the HRS is shaped by the economics of aging and how the economics of aging will be shaped by the HRS pp. 119-145

- Robert Willis
- An empirical analysis of the social security disability application, appeal, and award process pp. 147-178

- Hugo Benitez-Silva, Moshe Buchinsky, Hiu Man Chan, John Rust and Sofia Sheidvasser
- The dynamic effects of health on the labor force transitions of older workers pp. 179-202

- John Bound, Michael Schoenbaum, Todd Stinebrickner and Timothy Waidmann
- Retirement, financial incentives and health pp. 203-227

- Marcel Kerkhofs, Maarten Lindeboom and Jules Theeuwes
- Labor force transitions of older married couples in Germany pp. 229-252

- David Blau and Regina Riphahn
- The measurement and structure of household wealth pp. 253-275

- F. Juster, James Smith and Frank Stafford
- Saving after retirement: evidence from three different surveys pp. 277-310

- Rob Alessie, Annamaria Lusardi and Arie Kapteyn
- Retirement and housing adjustment in later life: evidence from the British Household Panel Survey pp. 311-333

- John Ermisch and Stephen Jenkins
Volume 6, issue 1, 1999
- Product markets and labour markets1 pp. 1-20

- Stephen Nickell
- LEEping into the future of labor economics: the research potential of linking employer and employee data pp. 25-41

- Daniel Hamermesh
- Bringing the firm back in pp. 43-51

- Jonathan Leonard
- Econometric analyses of linked employer-employee data pp. 53-74

- John Abowd and Francis Kramarz
- Job searchers, job matches and the elasticity of matching pp. 77-93

- Lourens Broersma and Jan van Ours
- Desired and actual labour supply of unmarried men and women in the Netherlands pp. 95-118

- Rob Euwals and Arthur van Soest
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