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Over the last 25 years the Danish economy has had difficulties in growing as fast as other EU countries and the United States. While the average growth difference is small, it signals that if this trend persists into the next century, Denmark will not be able to maintain its high position in the...
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This paper analyses how job security policies, which in practice result in higher firing costs, affect long-run employment and investment in a two country model with free trade in goods and capital. The effects turn out to depend crucially on the preferences of trade unions, and in particular on...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10005233030
A number of influential studies have documented a strong value premium for US stocks over the period 1963 to 1990 (Fama and French (1992), Lakonishok et al. (1994)). Stocks with low price-earnings multiples, price-book values and other measures of value are reported to have given a higher mean...
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A model with trade union rivalry is used to derive wage reaction functions, which are then estimated for skilled and unskilled men in Denmark. The results show substantial differences in wage determination between the two groups of workers in the short term, but once the wage-wage spiral starts...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10005157258
The role of devaluation in stimulating profitability, investment, and ec onomic activity is studied in a model characterized by forward-lookin g investment behavior and wage contracts that provide an element of s hort-term nominal wage rigidity. The analysis shows that, in the case where the...
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