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"Labor Matching Models: Putting The Pieces Together." Last updated October 21 2009, JOB MARKET PAPER
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Abstract. The original Mortensen-Pissarides model possesses two elements that are absent from the commonly used simplified version: the job destruction margin and job creation costs. I find that these two elements enable a model driven only by productivity shocks to simultaneously explain most of the movements in unemployment, vacancies, job destruction, job creation, the job finding rate and real wages. The role of the job destruction margin in propagating productivity shocks is to create an additional pool of unemployed at the very beginning of a recession. The role of job creation costs is to explain the simultaneous decline in vacancies.
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"Labor Wedge as a Matching Friction", with Paulina Restrepo-Echavarria, Last updated March 25 2009
Slides for LAMES/SED 2008
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Abstract. Variations in the labor wedge account for a large fraction of business cycle fluctuations. We provide an interpretation of the labor wedge from a search-theoretic perspective and assess the importance of job creation and job destruction shocks for business cycles. We find that the labor wedge is mainly driven by job creation shocks. However, in a recession, job destruction shocks account for the initial increase in unemployment, while negative job creation shocks are responsible for the slow recovery. Finally, we find that allowing for changes in the reservation value of workers can solve Shimer's puzzle.
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"Structural Transformation and Development: Demand or Supply Story", with Paulina Restrepo-Echavarria, Last updated March 25 2009
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Abstract. What is driving structural transformation? Some argue that it can be driven by different income elasticities, and others say that differences in productivity growth are the source of labor reallocation. We present a unifying framework which allows us to quantify the importance of supply and demand mechanisms for structural transformation and see how these forces change over time.
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