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Marriott Philadelphia Downtown, Meeting Room 406
Hosted By:
Econometric Society
that counteroffers, missing in most labor market theories, are a key variable in accounting for labor market distributions. In our model, too much counteroffering destroys the dispersion in wages offered, but too little of it renders the theory not being able to explain the observed distribution of wages earned.
assortative matching. Under these conditions, the firms over-invest in capital compared
with the first best, because capital is used as a screening device.
I show that the fact that firms need to screen workers in the presence of private
information changes the predictions of the model compared to that in the presence of
complete information. In particular, I show that the market economy exhibiting PAM
is not necessary nor sufficient for the complete information allocation to exhibit PAM.
Advances in Search Theory
Paper Session
Sunday, Jan. 7, 2018 1:00 PM - 3:00 PM
On the Pure Theory of Wage Dispersion
Abstract
We develop a pure theory of wage dispersion - an equilibrium model of search and on-the-job search, where identical firms offer differential wages/contracts to homogeneous workers. Jobs are optimal dynamic contracts that allow firms to match the worker's outside offers or let the job be terminated. Such a model is capable of generating distributions of wage offers that are non-degenerate and unimodal. It can also be calibrated to produce a wage offer dispersion that resembles observations, as well as a dispersion in the wages earned that is consistent with data, in shape and magnitude. We concludethat counteroffers, missing in most labor market theories, are a key variable in accounting for labor market distributions. In our model, too much counteroffering destroys the dispersion in wages offered, but too little of it renders the theory not being able to explain the observed distribution of wages earned.
Directed Search with Complementarity and Adverse Selection
Abstract
I study a model in which firms invest in capital and post wages, and heterogeneous workers, who have private information about their skills, choose where to apply. Workers and firms match bilaterally. Each matched agent gets an exogenous payoff from the match before wages are paid. Each of these payoffs displays complementarity in capital and skill. I derive conditions under which the market exhibits PAM, positiveassortative matching. Under these conditions, the firms over-invest in capital compared
with the first best, because capital is used as a screening device.
I show that the fact that firms need to screen workers in the presence of private
information changes the predictions of the model compared to that in the presence of
complete information. In particular, I show that the market economy exhibiting PAM
is not necessary nor sufficient for the complete information allocation to exhibit PAM.
Knowledge Creation and Diffusion with Limited Appropriability
Abstract
Abstract Innovation is central to economic growth, but so is the diffusion of new knowledge. Such is the finding of recent papers that model the interaction between these two forces. Absent in this literature are two key elements that are the focus of this paper. First, we consider the role of frictions in matching innovators and imitators mediating the process of knowledge transmission. Secondly, while most of the recent literature has focused on the case where all surplus from knowledge transmission is captured by the recipient (e.g. pure imitation), we consider all ranges of possible shares that the innovators/recipients can appropriate and their impact on growth. In a simple one period model, we derive a Hosios condition for the optimal share when firms are ex-ante homogeneous. But we also find that as the degree of heterogeneity increases, the share of innovators must decrease to maximize growth, approaching zero for sufficiently large heterogeneity. Our calibrated dynamic model suggests that the optimal share of surplus innovators appropriate should be in the lower end, consistent with weak intellectual property rights.JEL Classifications
- A1 - General Economics