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  • Search: subject:"spatial controls"
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Year of publication
Subject
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employment 7 employment change 7 minimum wages 7 spatial controls 7 Employment 4 Arbeitsmarkt 3 Beschäftigungseffekt 3 Employment effect 3 Erwerbstätigkeit 3 Labour market 3 Mindestlohn 3 Minimum wage 3 Employment change 2 Minimum wages 2 Spatial controls 2
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Online availability
All
Free 9
Type of publication
All
Book / Working Paper 7 Article 2
Type of publication (narrower categories)
All
Working Paper 4 Arbeitspapier 2 Graue Literatur 2 Non-commercial literature 2 Article 1 Article in journal 1 Aufsatz in Zeitschrift 1
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Language
All
English 6 Undetermined 3
Author
All
Addison, John T. 9 Blackburn, McKinley L. 9 Cotti, Chad 5 Cotti, Chad D. 4
Institution
All
Grupo de Estudos Monetários e Financeiros (GEMF), Faculdade de Economia 1 Institute for the Study of Labor (IZA) 1
Published in...
All
IZA Discussion Papers 2 IZA Journal of Labor Economics 2 Working Paper Series in Economics 2 Discussion paper series / IZA 1 GEMF Working Papers 1 University of Lüneburg Working paper series in economics 1
Source
All
ECONIS (ZBW) 3 EconStor 3 RePEc 3
Showing 1 - 9 of 9
Cover Image
On the robustness of minimum wage effects: Geographically-disparate trends and job growth equations
Addison, John T.; Blackburn, McKinley L.; Cotti, Chad D. - In: IZA Journal of Labor Economics 4 (2015), pp. 1-16
Recent attempts to incorporate spatial heterogeneity in minimum-wage employment models have been targeted for using overly simplistic trend controls and for neglecting the potential impact of wage minima on employment growth. This paper investigates whether such considerations call into question...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10011603353
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Cover Image
On the robustness of minimum wage effects : geographically-disparate trends and job growth equations
Addison, John T.; Blackburn, McKinley L.; Cotti, Chad - In: IZA Journal of Labor Economics 4 (2015), pp. 1-16
Recent attempts to incorporate spatial heterogeneity in minimum-wage employment models have been targeted for using overly simplistic trend controls and for neglecting the potential impact of wage minima on employment growth. This paper investigates whether such considerations call into question...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10011428629
Saved in:
Cover Image
On the Robustness of Minimum Wage Effects: Geographically-Disparate Trends and Job Growth Equations
Addison, John T.; Blackburn, McKinley L.; Cotti, Chad - 2014
Just as the standard two-way fixed effects model for estimating the impact of minimum wages on employment has been sharply criticized for its neglect of spatial heterogeneity so, too, have the latest models been attacked for their uncritical use of state- or county-specific linear trends (and...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10010409387
Saved in:
Cover Image
On the robustness of minimum wage effects: Geographically-disparate trends and job growth equations
Addison, John T.; Blackburn, McKinley L.; Cotti, Chad D. - 2014
Recent attempts to incorporate spatial heterogeneity in minimum-wage employment models have been attacked for using overly simplistic trend controls, and for neglecting the potential impact on employment growth. We investigate whether such considerations call into question our earlier findings...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10010478933
Saved in:
Cover Image
On the Robustness of Minimum Wage Effects: Geographically-Disparate Trends and Job Growth Equations
Addison, John T.; Blackburn, McKinley L.; Cotti, Chad D. - 2014
Recent attempts to incorporate spatial heterogeneity in minimum-wage employment models have been attacked for using overly simplistic trend controls, and for neglecting the potential impact on employment growth. We investigate whether such considerations call into question our earlier findings...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10011095640
Saved in:
Cover Image
On the Robustness of Minimum Wage Effects: Geographically-Disparate Trends and Job Growth Equations
Addison, John T.; Blackburn, McKinley L.; Cotti, Chad - Institute for the Study of Labor (IZA) - 2014
Just as the standard two-way fixed effects model for estimating the impact of minimum wages on employment has been sharply criticized for its neglect of spatial heterogeneity so, too, have the latest models been attacked for their uncritical use of state- or county-specific linear trends (and...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10010959669
Saved in:
Cover Image
On the Robustness of Minimum Wage Effects: Geographically-Disparate Trends and Job Growth Equations
Addison, John T.; Blackburn, McKinley L.; Cotti, Chad D. - Grupo de Estudos Monetários e Financeiros (GEMF), … - 2014
Recent attempts to incorporate spatial heterogeneity in minimum-wage employment models have been attacked for using overly simplistic trend controls, and for neglecting the potential impact on employment growth. We investigate whether such considerations call into question our earlier findings...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10010929428
Saved in:
Cover Image
On the robustness of minimum wage effects : geographically-disparate trends and job growth equations
Addison, John T.; Blackburn, McKinley L.; Cotti, Chad - 2014
Just as the standard two-way fixed effects model for estimating the impact of minimum wages on employment has been sharply criticized for its neglect of spatial heterogeneity so, too, have the latest models been attacked for their uncritical use of state- or county-specific linear trends (and...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10010402096
Saved in:
Cover Image
On the robustness of minimum wage effects : geographically-disparate trends and job growth equations
Addison, John T.; Blackburn, McKinley L.; Cotti, Chad - 2014
Recent attempts to incorporate spatial heterogeneity in minimum-wage employment models have been attacked for using overly simplistic trend controls, and for neglecting the potential impact on employment growth. We investigate whether such considerations call into question our earlier findings...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10010440736
Saved in:
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