1,976 research outputs found
Specific Human Capital and Real Wage Cyclicality: An Application to Postgraduate Wage Premium
This paper examines how specific human capital affects labour turnover and real wage cyclicality in a frictional labour market. I develop an equilibrium search model with long-term contracts and imperfect monitoring of worker effort. Imperfect monitoring creates a moral hazard problem that requires firms to pay efficiency wages. The optimal contract implies that more specific capital reduces job separation, thereby alleviating the moral hazard and increasing wage stability over the business cycle. I apply this model to explain novel stylised facts about the cyclicality of the postgraduate-undergraduate wage premium. Postgraduate degree holders experience lower cyclical variation in real wages than those with undergraduate degrees. This effect is significant for workers with a long tenure, but not for new hires. Moreover, postgraduates have more specific human capital than undergraduates. Estimates reveal that specific capital can explain the educational gaps both in labour turnover and in real wage cyclicality
Boathouse
The Boathouse creates a fragmented integration of the surrounding landscape and the interior volumes through folded tectonics
Speciļ¬c capital, firm insurance, and the dynamics of the postgraduate wage premium
Postgraduate degree holders experience lower cyclical wage variation than those with undergraduate degrees. Moreover, postgraduates have more speciļ¬c human capital than undergraduates. Using an equilibrium search model with long-term contracts and imperfect monitoring of worker eļ¬ort, this paper attributes the cyclicality of the postgraduate-undergraduate wage gap to the diļ¬erences in speciļ¬c capital. Imperfect monitoring creates a moral hazard problem that requires ļ¬rms to pay eļ¬ciency wages. More speciļ¬c capital leads to lower mobility, thereby alleviating the moral hazard and improving risk-sharing. Estimates reveal that speciļ¬c capital explains the diļ¬erences both in labour turnover and in wage cyclicality across education groups
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