316 research outputs found

    The Public Investment in Atomic Power Development

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    Firm dynamics, job turnover, and wage distributions in an open economy

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    This paper explores the effects of tariffs, trade costs, and firing costs on firm dynamics and labor markets outcomes. The analysis is based on a general equilibrium model with labor market search frictions, wage bargaining, firing costs, firm-specific productivity shocks, and endogenous entry/exit decisions. Firing costs reduce firms' profits and discourage them from quickly adjusting their employment levels in response to idiosyncratic shocks. Tariffs and other trade costs reduce rents for efficient firms and increase rents for inefficient firms, as in Melitz (2003). These well-known effects interact with idiosyncratic productivity shocks and with scale economies in hiring costs to determine the equilibrium size distribution of firms, entry/exit rates, job turnover rates, rate of informality, and cross-firm wage distributions.

    Public Investment Criteria for Water Oriented Recreation in the Lake Erie Basin

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    This study was supported in part by the Office of Water Resources Research, U.S. Department of the Interior under Project A-009-0HI0.Item includes a reprint of a journal article: Richard A. Tybout, "Pricing Pollution and Other Negative Externalities", Bell Journal of Economics and Management Science, Vol. 3 (Spring, 1972), pp. 252-266. The results of the research project were originally published in this articleIntroduction -- Economic Criteria -- Recreation Measurement -- Conclusion -- Appendi

    Solar House Heating

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    Firm Dynamics, Job Turnover, and Wage Distributions in an Open Economy

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    This paper explores the combined effects of reductions in trade frictions, tariffs, and firing costs on firm dynamics, job turnover, and wage distributions. It uses establishment-level data from Colombia to estimate an open economy dynamic model that links trade to job flows in a new way. The fitted model captures key features of Colombian firm dynamics and labor market outcomes, as well changes in these features during the past 25 years. Counterfactual experiments imply that integration with global product markets has increased both average income and job turnover in Colombia. In contrast, the experiments find little role for this country's labor market reforms in driving these variables. The results speak more generally to the effects of globalization on labor markets in Latin America and elsewhere.

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    Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/44495/1/10745_2005_Article_BF01880261.pd
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