Whither Job Destruction? Unemployment, Job Flows and Hours in a New Keynesian Model
Labour markets play a key role in business cycle analysis. Although a focal point of research on unemployment over the past decade, endogenous job destruction has recently fallen into disfavour, since its introduction leads to a positively sloped Beveridge curve. We show that introducing variation in hours per worker - a second margin for labour input adjustment in combination with endogenous job destruction generates a negatively sloped Beveridge curve, a data consistent correlation structure for job flows and captures many aspects of the cyclical behaviour of hours per worker. This improved peformance is robust to wage rigidity (which raises the variability of unemployment and labour market tightness) and a wide range of empirically plausible labour supply elasticities - but not completely inelastic labour supply implicit in much of the literature on labour market search.
Year of publication: |
2006-11
|
---|---|
Authors: | Holt, Richard |
Institutions: | School of Economics, University of Edinburgh |
Saved in:
freely available
Saved in favorites
Similar items by person
-
Non-Convexities, Asymmetries and Aggregate Investment Activity: Evidence for the UK
Holt, Richard, (2004)
-
Investment and Dividends under Irreversibility and Financial Constraints (first version)
Holt, Richard, (2004)
-
Forecasting Cross-Section Stock Returns using Theoretical Prices Estimated from an Econometric Model
Buckley, George, (2004)
- More ...