Extent: | X, 401 S. graph. Darst. |
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Type of publication: | Book / Working Paper |
Language: | English |
Notes: | Description based upon print version of record Cover; Title; Copyright; Dedication; Contents; Preface; PART ONE: BASICS; 1 Introduction; 1.1 The Advantages of a Monopsonistic Perspective; 1.2 Objections to Monopsony and Oligopsony; 1.3 Monopsony or Matching or Both?; 1.4 Antecedents; 1.5 Summary of Chapters and Main Results; 2 Simple Models of Monopsony and Oligopsony; 2.1 Static Partial Equilibrium Models of Monopsony; 2.2 A Simple Model of Dynamic Monopsony; 2.3 A Generalized Model of Monopsony; 2.4 A General Equilibrium Model of Oligopsony; 2.5 Perfect Competition and Monopsony; 2.6 A Simple Measure of Monopsony Power 2.7 Positive and Normative Aspects of Monopsony and Oligopsony2.8 Implications and Conclusions; Appendix 2; 3 Efficiency in Oligopsonistic Labor Markets; 3.1 Free Entry of Firms; 3.2 Endogenous Recruitment Activity; 3.3 Elasticity in Labor Supply: Free Entry of Workers; 3.4 Elasticity in Labor Supply: Heterogeneity in Reservation Wages; 3.5 Heterogeneity in Reservation Wages and Free Entry of Firms; 3.6 Multiple Equilibria in Models of Oligopsony: An Application to Ghettoes; 3.7 Conclusions; Appendix 3; 4 The Elasticity of the Labor Supply Curve to an Individual Firm 4.1 The Employer Size-Wage Effect4.2 Competing Explanations for the Employer Size-Wage Effect; 4.3 Reverse Regressions; 4.4 Estimating Models of Dynamic Monopsony; 4.5 Estimating the Wage Elasticity of Separations; 4.6 The Proportion of Recruits from Employment; 4.7 The Elasticity of the Labor Supply Curve Facing the Firm; 4.8 The Estimation of Structural Equilibrium Search Models of the Labor Market; 4.9 Conclusions; Appendix 4A; Appendix 4B; PART TWO: THE STRUCTURE OF WAGES; 5 The Wage Policies of Employers; 5.1 The Discriminating Monopsonist; 5.2 Non-Manipulable Wage Discrimination 5.3 Empirical Evidence5.4 Conclusions; Appendix 5; 6 Earnings and the Life Cycle; 6.1 The Earnings Losses of Displaced Workers; 6.2 Sample Selection in the Cross-Sectional Earnings Profile; 6.3 The Cross-Sectional Returns to Experience and Tenure in a Job-Shopping Model; 6.4 Empirical Approaches to the Estimation of the Life-Cycle Profile in Earnings; 6.5 Estimating the Return to Job Mobility; 6.6 The Life-Cycle Profile of Earnings for Older Men; 6.7 Conclusions; Appendix 6A; Appendix 6B; 7 Gender Discrimination in Labor Markets; 7.1 The Gender Pay Gap; 7.2 Monopsony and the Gender Pay Gap 7.3 The Elasticity in Labor Supply to the Firm and the Market7.4 Money and Motivation; 7.5 Gender Differences in the Returns to Job Mobility; 7.6 Gender Differences in the Wage Elasticity of Separations; 7.7 Human Capital Explanations of the Gender Pay Gap; 7.8 The Effect of UK Equal Pay Legislation; 7.9 Prejudice and Monopsony; 7.10 Conclusions; 8 Employers and Wages; 8.1 Explaining the Correlations between Employer Characteristics and Wages; 8.2 Monopsony and Compensating Wage Differentials; 8.3 Choice of Working Conditions; 8.4 Mandated Benefits; 8.5 Hours of Work; 8.6 Conclusion Appendix 8 |
ISBN: | 978-0-691-12328-8 ; 978-1-4008-5067-9 ; 978-0-691-12328-8 |
Classification: | Einkommen, Beschäftigung, Arbeitsmarkt ; Geschlechter und ihr Verhalten ; Methoden und Techniken der Volkswirtschaft |
Source: | ECONIS - Online Catalogue of the ZBW |
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10012684094