Article (Scientific journals)
Deregulation shock in product market and unemployment
Bertinelli, Luisito; Cardi, Olivier; Sen, Partha
2013In Journal of Economic Dynamics & Control, 37 (4), p. 711-734
Peer reviewed
 

Files


Full Text
paper_JEDC_7716-2_R.pdf
Publisher postprint (480.55 kB)
Request a copy

All documents in ORBilu are protected by a user license.

Send to



Details



Keywords :
Imperfect competition; Endogenous markup; Search theory; Unemployment; Deregulation
Abstract :
[en] In a dynamic general equilibrium model with endogenous markups and labor market frictions, we investigate the effects of increased product market competition. Unlike most macroeconomic models of search, we endogenize the labor supply along the extensive margin. We find numerically that a model with endogenous labor force participation decision produces a decline in the unemployment rate which is almost three times larger than that in a model with fixed labor force. For a calibration capturing alternatively the European and the US labor markets, a deregulation episode, which lowers the markup by 3 percentage points, results in a fall in the unemployment rate by 0.17 and 0.05 percentage point, respectively, while the labor share is almost unaffected in the long-run. The sensitivity analysis reveals that product market deregulation is more effective in countries where product and labor market regulations are high, unemployment benefits are small and labor force is more responsive.
Disciplines :
Macroeconomics & monetary economics
Author, co-author :
Bertinelli, Luisito ;  University of Luxembourg > Faculty of Law, Economics and Finance (FDEF) > Center for Research in Economic Analysis (CREA)
Cardi, Olivier
Sen, Partha
External co-authors :
yes
Language :
English
Title :
Deregulation shock in product market and unemployment
Publication date :
April 2013
Journal title :
Journal of Economic Dynamics & Control
ISSN :
0165-1889
Publisher :
Elsevier Science
Volume :
37
Issue :
4
Pages :
711-734
Peer reviewed :
Peer reviewed
Available on ORBilu :
since 27 June 2013

Statistics


Number of views
88 (15 by Unilu)
Number of downloads
5 (5 by Unilu)

Scopus citations®
 
7
Scopus citations®
without self-citations
7
OpenCitations
 
4
WoS citations
 
6

Bibliography


Similar publications



Contact ORBilu