237 research outputs found
Optimal Unemployment Insurance in a Matching Equilibrium
This paper considers the optimal design of unemployment insurance (UI) within an equilibrium matching framework when wages are determined by strategic bargaining. Unlike the Nash bargaining approach, reducing UI payments with duration is welfare increasing. A co-ordinated policy approach, however, one that chooses job creation subsidies and UI optimally, implies a much greater welfare gain than one which considers optimal UI alone. Once job creation subsidies are chosen optimally, the welfare value of making UI payments duration dependent is small.
Duration Dependent Unemployment Insurance and Stabilisation Policy
In the context of a standard equilibrium matching framework, this paper shows how a duration dependent unemployment insurance (UI) system stabilises unemployment levels over the business cycle. It establishes that re-entitlement effects induced by a finite duration UI program generate intertemporal tranfers from firms that hire in future booms to firms that hire in current recessions. These transfers imply a net hiring subsidy in recessions which stabilises unemployment levels over the cycle.
Re-entitlement Effects with Duration Dependent Unemployment Insurance in a Stochastic Matching Equilibrium
In the context of a standard equilibrium matching framework, this paper considers how a duration dependent unemployment insurance (UI) system affects the dynamics of unemployment and wages in an economy subject to stochastic job-destruction shocks. It establishes that re-entitlement effects induced by a finite duration UI program generate intertemporal transfers from firms that hire in future booms to firms that hire in current recessions. These transfers imply a net hiring subsidy in recessions which stabilizes unemployment levels over the cycleMatching frictions, Unemployment, Duration Dependent UI.
The Bull's-Eye Effect as a Probe of
We compare the statistical properties of structures normal and transverse to
the line of sight which appear in theoretical N-body simulations of structure
formation, and seem also to be present in observational data from redshift
surveys. We present a statistic which can quantify this effect in a
conceptually different way from standard analyses of distortions of the
power-spectrum or correlation function. From tests with --body experiments,
we argue that this statistic represents a new and potentially powerful
diagnostic of the cosmological density parameter, .Comment: Minor revisions; final version accepted for publication in ApJ
Letters. Latex, 16 pages, including 3 figures. Higher resolution versions of
figures, including supplementary figures not included in the manuscript, are
available at: ftp://kusmos.phsx.ukans.edu/preprints/melott/omeg
A Test of the Particle Paradigm in N-Body Simulations
We present results of tests of the evolution of small ``fluid elements'' in
cosmological N--body simulations, to examine the validity of their treatment as
particles. We find that even very small elements typically collapse along one
axis while expanding along another, often to twice or more their initial
comoving diameter. This represents a possible problem for high--resolution uses
of such simulations.Comment: Uses aasms4.sty; accepted for publication in ApJ Letters. Files
available also at ftp://kusmos.phsx.ukans.edu/preprints/ates
Bias and Hierarchical Clustering
It is now well established that galaxies are biased tracers of the
distribution of matter, although it is still not known what form this bias
takes. In local bias models the propensity for a galaxy to form at a point
depends only on the overall density of matter at that point. Hierarchical
scaling arguments allow one to build a fully-specified model of the underlying
distribution of matter and to explore the effects of local bias in the regime
of strong clustering. Using a generating-function method developed by
Bernardeau & Schaeffer (1992), we show that hierarchical models lead one
directly to the conclusion that a local bias does not alter the shape of the
galaxy correlation function relative to the matter correlation function on
large scales. This provides an elegant extension of a result first obtained by
Coles (1993) for Gaussian underlying fields and confirms the conclusions of
Scherrer & Weinberg (1998) obtained using a different approach. We also argue
that particularly dense regions in a hierarchical density field display a form
of bias that is different from that obtained by selecting such peaks in
Gaussian fields: they are themselves hierarchically distributed with scaling
parameters . This kind of bias is also factorizable, thus in
principle furnishing a simple test of this class of models.Comment: Latex, accepted for publication in ApJL; moderate revision
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