Search results for "RECESS"

showing 10 items of 379 documents

Job protection deregulation in good and bad times

2019

Abstract This paper explores the short-term employment effect of deregulating job protection for regular workers and how it varies with prevailing business cycle conditions. We apply the local projection method to a newly constructed dataset of major regular job protection reforms covering 26 advanced economies over the past four decades. The analysis relies on country-sector-level data, using as identifying assumption the fact that stringent dismissal regulations are more binding in sectors that are characterized by a higher ‘natural’ propensity to make regular adjustments to the workforce. We find that the response of sectoral employment to deregulation depends crucially on the state of t…

Economics and EconometricsLabour economics050208 financeEconomic expansionmedia_common.quotation_subject05 social sciencesRecessionDeregulationDismissal0502 economics and businessWorkforceBusiness cycleEconomics050207 economicshealth care economics and organizationsmedia_commonOxford Economic Papers
researchProduct

Frictional and Non-Frictional Unemployment in a Labor Market with Matching Frictions

2016

Using the Mortensen and Pissarides model of a labor market with frictions, this paper proposes a new method, simpler than the one presented in Michaillat (2012), for decomposing unemployment into frictional and non-frictional (rationing) unemployment for a derived rigid wage-setting rule. We use it to compute the frictional and non frictional unemployment rate for two economies characterized by different labor market institutions, namely the US and the Spanish economy. For the entire period under study, the US frictional unemployment rate is around 36 per cent of total unemployment, whereas for Spain, approximately 20 per cent of all unemployment is due to frictions. This outcome may be exp…

Economics and EconometricsLabour economicsMatching (statistics)Full employmentmedia_common.quotation_subject05 social sciencesRationingRecession0502 economics and businessUnemploymentEconomics050207 economicsFrictional unemployment050205 econometrics media_commonThe Manchester School
researchProduct

Do credit constraints reduce foreign jobs? A note on foreign direct employment

2014

This article studies the effect of credit constraints on the jobs created by multinational enterprises in host countries. Although most FDI is labour intensive, few studies delve into the determinants of foreign direct employment (FDE). This article constructs a model of limited commitment between the financed and financing parties to explain how FDE is affected by financial frictions. Moreover, this study examines FDE’s determinants empirically on a global data set including FDE data from 161 countries during 2003–2010 by means of the gravity equation. Results show that credit constraints during the Great Recession roughly halved FDE, tripling the effect on FDI and suggesting that domestic…

Economics and EconometricsLabour economicsMultinational corporationEconomicsGravity equationForeign direct investmentGreat recessionApplied Economics Letters
researchProduct

A Cointegration Analysis of Car Advertising and Sales Data in the Presence of Structural Change

2006

Abstract This paper examines whether there is a long‐run stable equilibrium relationship between advertising and sales across the market segments of the UK car industry over the period 1971–2001. In order to achieve this goal, we allow for structural breaks in the series using cointegration techniques. The results show the existence of long‐run equilibrium relationships in all six market segments, although in four of them the relationship is not stable. In general, one structural change is detected in the late 1970s and another in the early 1990s, coinciding with two economic recessions. When we do not account for structural changes, the estimated long‐run elasticities of advertising on sal…

Economics and EconometricsStructural changeMarket segmentationCointegrationOrder (exchange)media_common.quotation_subjectStructural breakEconomicsBusiness Management and Accounting (miscellaneous)Stable equilibriumAdvertisingRecessionmedia_commonInternational Journal of the Economics of Business
researchProduct

The impact of the Great Recession on TFP convergence among EU countries

2017

ABSTRACTThis article provides evidence on the effect of the Great Recession on productivity convergence among European Union (EU) economies. We use firm data, aggregated at the country-year level, to analyse the evolution of beta-convergence on total factor productivity (TFP) for 2003–2014. We obtain a positive impact of the recession on TFP (unconditional and conditional) beta-convergence across EU economies. These results support the existence of a catching-up process within the EU during the recent financial crisis. Other macroeconomic and institutional characteristics are important in fostering TFP growth, namely R&D intensity and quality of governance.

Economics and Econometricsbusiness.industryCorporate governancemedia_common.quotation_subject05 social sciencesConvergence (economics)Monetary economicsInternational tradeRecession0502 economics and businessFinancial crisisEconomicsmedia_common.cataloged_instance050207 economicsEuropean unionbusinessGlobal recessionTotal factor productivityProductivity050205 econometrics media_commonApplied Economics Letters
researchProduct

The scarcity of worker cooperatives in the USA: enquiring into possible causes

2018

Even though the access of workers to capital has been promoted in some countries for over centuries, Governments and public bodies have started to promote it worldwide, as in previous occasions, more particularly as an aftermath of the Great Recession, usually in the form of worker cooperatives.However, workers’ access to capital in the USA in the form of worker cooperatives is still surprisingly rare. We cannot find any recent public policies at a federal level in order to promote them and the old ones that exist remain mostly obsolete and unknown. Only at a state and local level, we find in the latest years a series of actions directed to achieve this goal, as in the case of New York City…

Economics and Econometricsgenetic structuresSociology and Political Sciencemedia_common.quotation_subjectPublic policyUNESCO::CIENCIAS ECONÓMICAS:CIENCIAS ECONÓMICAS [UNESCO]Great recessionScarcityState (polity)Order (exchange)Federal levelCapital (economics)Development economicsBusinessmedia_commonCIRIEC-España, revista de economía pública, social y cooperativa
researchProduct

Life-cycle effects in small business finance

2017

This paper studies the life-cycle profiles of small firms’ cost and use of credit using a panel of Finnish firms. The choice of method matters for the conclusions drawn about the relationship between firm age and financing costs; the cross-sectional age profiles of financing costs are hump-shaped and consistent with hold-up theories, whereas methods that control for cohort fixed effects demonstrate that the financing costs decrease monotonically as the firms mature. The life-cycle profiles of the use of credit also indicate that firms are more dependent on financial intermediaries in the early periods of their lives. Furthermore, the cohorts born during recessions pay higher financing costs…

Economics and Econometricslife-cycle effectsmedia_common.quotation_subjecteducationControl (management)Financial intermediaryRecession0502 economics and businessEarly adulthoodEconomics050207 economicsta512health care economics and organizationsmedia_commonFinance050208 financebusiness.industry05 social sciencescohort effectssmall business financeSmall businessInternal financingCohort effectCohortbusinessFinanceJournal of Banking and Finance
researchProduct

Aggregate uncertainty and sectoral productivity growth: The role of credit constraints

2016

Abstract We show that an increase in aggregate uncertainty—measured by stock market volatility—reduces productivity growth more in industries that depend heavily on external finance. The mechanism at play is that during periods of high uncertainty, firms that are credit constrained switch the composition of investment by reducing productivity-enhancing investment—such as on ICT capital—which is more subject to liquidity risks (Aghion et al., 2010). The effect is larger during recessions, when financing constraints are more likely to be binding, than during expansions. Our statistical method—a difference-in-difference approach using productivity growth of 25 industries from 18 advanced econo…

Economics and Econometricsmedia_common.quotation_subjectMonetary economicsRecession0502 economics and businessEconomicsEconometrics050207 economicsTotal factor productivityProductivityGeneral Environmental Sciencemedia_commonInformation and communication technology investmentReverse causality050208 finance05 social sciencesInstrumental variableAggregate (data warehouse)UncertaintySettore SECS-P/02 Politica EconomicaOmitted-variable biasInvestment (macroeconomics)Fiscal policyMarket liquidityEconometric modelFinancial dependenceProductivity growthOutput gapGeneral Earth and Planetary SciencesStock marketFinance
researchProduct

Territorial Capital and Growth over the Great Recession: a Local Analysis for Italy"

2017

The consequences of the crisis have been mainly analyzed at national/ international levels, neglecting its differential effects on local areas. Notwithstanding the international character of the Great Recession, the different local structural features might have influenced the economic and social impact of the crisis, determining effects on the resilience and recovery chance. In this paper, we focus on the role of different territorial indicators by looking at how their relevance has changed during the recent crisis at provincial level. Our aim is threefold. First, we identify the strategic territorial elements which might be particularly relevant in ensuring a greater local absorption capa…

Economies of agglomerationmedia_common.quotation_subject05 social sciencesControl (management)0211 other engineering and technologiesGeneral Social Sciences021107 urban & regional planning02 engineering and technologySettore SECS-P/06 - Economia ApplicataGreat recessionVariable (computer science)Panel analysisLocal analysisCapital (economics)0502 economics and businessEconomicsTerritorial capital Crisis NUTS-3 regionsEconomic geographyPsychological resilience050207 economicsEconomic systemGeneral Environmental Sciencemedia_common
researchProduct

A novel EDA variant causing X-linked hypohidrotic ectodermal dysplasia: Case report

2021

Abstract Hereditary ectodermal dysplasias are a complex group of inherited disorders characterised by abnormalities in two or more ectodermal derivatives (skin, nails, sweat glands, etc.). There are two main types of these disorders – hidrotic and hypohidrotic/anhidrotic ectodermal dysplasias. Hypohidrotic ectodermal dysplasia (HED) or Christ-Siemens-Touraine syndrome (OMIM: 305100 ) occurs in 1 out of 5000–10,000 births [19] and has an X-linked recessive inheritance pattern (X-linked hypohydrotic ectodermal dysplasia – XLHED) [2] . The main cause of XLHED is a broad range of pathogenic variants in the EDA gene (HGNC:3157, Xq12-13) which encodes the transmembrane protein ectodysplasin-A [4]…

Ectodermal dysplasiaMedicine (General)QH301-705.5Case ReportEctodermal dysplasiaBiologyEndocrinologyR5-920Recessive inheritanceGeneticsmedicineHypohidrotic ectodermal dysplasiaAlleleBiology (General)Molecular BiologyX-linked recessive inheritanceGenetic testingGeneticsmedicine.diagnostic_testPGT-MXLHEDmedicine.diseaseFamily memberChrist-Siemens-Touraine syndromeEctodysplasin AEDAX-linked recessive disorderMolecular Genetics and Metabolism Reports
researchProduct