151 research outputs found
Gender Differences in Russian Colour Naming
In the present study we explored Russian colour naming in a web-based psycholinguistic experiment
(http://www.colournaming.com). Colour singletons representing the Munsell Color Solid (N=600 in total) were presented on a computer monitor and named using an unconstrained colour-naming method. Respondents were
Russian speakers (N=713). For gender-split equal-size samples (NF=333, NM=333) we estimated and compared (i)
location of centroids of 12 Russian basic colour terms (BCTs); (ii) the number of words in colour descriptors; (iii) occurrences of BCTs most frequent non-BCTs. We found a close correspondence between females’ and males’
BCT centroids. Among individual BCTs, the highest inter-gender agreement was for seryj ‘grey’ and goluboj
‘light blue’, while the lowest was for sinij ‘dark blue’ and krasnyj ‘red’. Females revealed a significantly richer repertory of distinct colour descriptors, with great variety of monolexemic non-BCTs and “fancy” colour names; in comparison, males offered relatively more BCTs or their compounds. Along with these measures, we gauged
denotata of most frequent CTs, reflected by linguistic segmentation of colour space, by employing a synthetic
observer trained by gender-specific responses. This psycholinguistic representation revealed females’ more
refined linguistic segmentation, compared to males, with higher linguistic density predominantly along the redgreen axis of colour space
Are the Spanish Long-Term Unemployed Unemployable?
Long-term unemployment reached unprecedented levels in Spain in the wake of the Great Recession and it still affects around 57% of the unemployed. We document the sources that contributed to the rise in long-term unemployment and analyze its persistence using state-ofthe- art duration models. We find pervasive evidence of negative duration dependence, while personal characteristics such as mature age, lack of experience, and entitlement to unemployment benefits are key to understand the cross-sectional differences in the incidence of long-term unemployment. The negative impact of low levels of skills and education is muted by the large share of temporary contracts, but once we restrict attention to employment spells lasting at least one month these factors also contribute to a higher risk of long-term unemployment. Surprisingly, workers from the construction sector do not fare worse than similar workers from other sectors. Finally, self-reported reservation wages are found to respond strongly to the cycle, but much less to individual unemployment duration. In view of these findings, we argue that active labour market policies should play a more prominent role in the fight against long-term unemployment while early activation should be used to curb inflows.This is a revised version of the Presidential Address of the 40th Simposio de la Asociación Española de
Economía delivered by the first author in Girona (December 2015). We are grateful to Manuel Arellano, Rolf
Campos, Mario Izquierdo, Ernesto Villanueva, and seminar participants at the Banco de España, the European
Central Bank, the International Labor Office, and the University of Edinburgh for comments, to Yolanda Rebollo-
Sanz for help with the data set, and to Lucía Gorjón and Ingeborg Kukla for excellent research assistance.
Bentolila thanks the Economics Department of Universidad Carlos III de Madrid for their hospitality. García-Pérez
and Jansen gratefully acknowledge financial support from MINECO/FEDER (grants ECO2015-65408-R and
ECO2015-69631-P)
The Economic Effects of Public Financing: Evidence from Municipal Bond Ratings Recalibration
Local Fiscal Multiplier on R&D and Science Spending: Evidence from the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act
- …