Adrien's job market paper shows that the job-losing-rate is responsible for most of the spatial differences in unemployment and develops a dynamic theory of spatial geography that features equilibrium ...
(See “Supply and Demand”) Yet the very existence of unemployment seems to imply that in labor markets around the world, the demand for and supply of labor fail to reach an equilibrium. Do labor ...
https://doi.org/10.15609/annaeconstat2009.138.0077 • https://www.jstor.org/stable/10.15609/annaeconstat2009.138.0077 Copy URL By being indexed backwards on the wage ...
Yet the very existence of unemployment seems to imply that in labor markets around the world, the demand for and supply of labor fail to reach an equilibrium. Do labor markets continually fail? But ...