1st Edition

The Applied Economics of Labour

Edited By Mark Taylor Copyright 2012
    140 Pages
    by Routledge

    140 Pages
    by Routledge

    This book provides an introduction and overview to seven applied financial studies on the theme of labour. The studies cover a wide range of topics, from the individual effects of becoming disabled on key aspects of labour market outcomes in Germany, to testing whether there is evidence of compression of morbidity using Health and Retirement Study (HRS) data and analysing the effects of this on the labour supply of older people. The studies employ a variety of applied techniques across a range of countries.

    This book was originally published as a special issue of Applied Economics.

    1. The applied economics of labour: introduction and overview M. P. Taylor

    2. The effect of disability on labour market outcomes in Germany M. Lechner and R. Vazquez-Alvarez

    3. International differences in the family gap in pay: the role of labour market institutions A. Dupuy and D. Fernandez-Kranz

    4. How to quickly get a job? The transition from higher education to French labour market by a survival model C. P. Barros, J. P. Guironnet and N. Peypoch

    5. The effect of employment protection and product market regulation on labour market performance: substitution or complementarity? B. Amable, L. Demmou and D. Gatti

    6. Labour productivity in Spain: 1977–2002 R. Nicolini

    7. Outsourcing, labour productivity and wage inequality in the US: a primal approach A. Chongvilaivan and J. Hur

    8. Compression of morbidity and the labour supply of older people L. R. Gordo

    Biography

    Mark P. Taylor is Dean of Warwick Business School, UK, and is a leading international authority in open economy macroeconomics and international finance. Although interested in broad research subjects, he focuses particularly on empirical work on exchange rates. Amongst his many published works are studies on the presence of nonlinearity in real and nominal exchange rate movements, on the long-run behaviour of real exchange rates, on the nature and effectiveness of official foreign exchange market intervention and on the micro-structural effects of European Central Bank interest rate announcements.