The American Economic Review, Volume 97American Economic Association., 2007 |
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... Consider a population for which Assumptions 2 and 4 hold and let μ be any maximal matching ( when there is no restriction on the size of the ex- changes that can be included in a matching ) . Then there exists a maximal matching v which ...
... Consider a population for which Assumptions 2 and 4 hold and let μ be any maximal matching ( when there is no restriction on the size of the ex- changes that can be included in a matching ) . Then there exists a maximal matching v which ...
Página 1317
... consider the subgame in which all buyers sign the exclusive contract in period 1 and R does enter in period 2. If R offers a price p , p " , then no buyer will breach . Consider p , < p " . Because the exclusive con- tract is binding on ...
... consider the subgame in which all buyers sign the exclusive contract in period 1 and R does enter in period 2. If R offers a price p , p " , then no buyer will breach . Consider p , < p " . Because the exclusive con- tract is binding on ...
Página 1392
... Consider the same model as above , but now suppose that time is continuous , denoted by s . We assume that at each point in time each capi- tal - owner in sector M gets a chance to exit the sector with a ( constant and exogenous ) ...
... Consider the same model as above , but now suppose that time is continuous , denoted by s . We assume that at each point in time each capi- tal - owner in sector M gets a chance to exit the sector with a ( constant and exogenous ) ...
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EDMUND S PHELPS | 541 |
O 2 0 2007 | 713 |
ALMA COHEN AND LIRAN EINAV | 745 |
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agents aggregate American Economic Review analysis assets assume assumption average behavior benchmark Beveridge curve business cycles candidates capital changes choice coefficient cointegration consumer consumption contracts correlation cost of business countercyclical deductible degree distributions distribution durables effect empirical equation equilibrium estimated exchange expected Figure firms function given growth HIP model households implies impulse responses income increase individuals inflation inventory investment investment rate Journal of Economics labor market loss aversion marginal likelihood matching Matthew Rabin ment Michael Woodford monetary policy nodes nomic observed optimal output pairs paper parameters patients percent policy shock post.com preferences procyclical production Proposition random regime relative response risk aversion sample Section sector Shapley value side payments simulations sticky prices stochastic Table theory tion tradable unemployment utility variables variance volatility vouchers wage workers Yangzi Delta