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Labor supply
Author:
ISBN: 0521233267 0521299160 0511572107 9780521299169 9780511572104 9780521233262 Year: 1984 Publisher: Cambridge: Cambridge university press,

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Abstract

Labor Supply is a survey of and critical guide to recent theoretical and empirical work on labor supply models, both static and dynamic. The chapters on recent empirical studies and on dynamic models are of particular interest, because neither topic has so far been discussed in any detail in standard texts. Integrated within this survey is an extensive discussion of public policy issues relating to labor supply, including income transfer programs, such as welfare and Social Security, and the income tax system. A concluding chapter discusses secular trends in labor supply in the U.S. economy, in particular the long-run increase in female labor force participation.

The economics of comparable worth
Author:
ISBN: 0880990856 Year: 1990 Publisher: Kalamazoo, Mich. W.E. Upjohn Institute for Employment Research

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Keywords

Wage formation


Book
Comparable worth : analyses and evidence
Authors: ---
ISBN: 0875461484 Year: 1989 Publisher: Ithaca, N.Y. ILR Press

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Keywords

Wages


Book
Correcting for Truncation Bias Caused by a Latent Truncation Variable
Authors: --- ---
Year: 1984 Publisher: Cambridge, Mass. National Bureau of Economic Research

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Abstract

We discuss estimation of the model Y[sub i] = X[sub i]b[sub y] + e[sub Yi] and T[sub i] =X[sub i]b[sub T] + e[sub Ti] when data on the continuous dependent variable Y and on the independent variables X are observed if the "truncation variable" T > 0 and when T is latent. This case is distinct from both (i) the "censored sample" case, in which Y data are available if T > 0, T is latent and X data are available for all observations, and (ii) the "observed truncation variable" case, in which both Y and X are observed if T > 0 and in which the actual value of T is observed whenever T > O. We derive a maximum-likelihood procedure for estimating this model and discuss identification and estimation.

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Multi
Women in the Labor Market

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Keywords

Economics

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