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Freedman, Matthew – Journal of Human Resources, 2013
This paper uses a regression discontinuity design to examine the effects of geographically targeted business incentives on local labor markets. Unlike elsewhere in the United States, enterprise zone (EZ) designations in Texas are determined in part by a cutoff rule based on census block group poverty rates. Exploiting this discontinuity as a…
Descriptors: Labor Market, Personnel Selection, Incentives, Poverty
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Muhlenweg, Andrea M.; Puhani, Patrick A. – Journal of Human Resources, 2010
In Germany, students are streamed at age ten into an academic or nonacademic track. We demonstrate that the randomly allocated disadvantage of being born just before as opposed to just after the cutoff date for school entry leads to substantially different schooling experiences. Relatively young students are initially only two-thirds as likely to…
Descriptors: School Readiness, Foreign Countries, Track System (Education), Age Differences
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Rooth, Dan-Olof – Journal of Human Resources, 2009
This study presents evidence of differential treatment in the hiring of obese individuals in the Swedish labor market. Fictitious applications were sent to real job openings. The applications were sent in pairs, where one facial photo of an otherwise identical applicant was manipulated to show the individual as obese. Applications sent with the…
Descriptors: Obesity, Females, Personnel Selection, Labor Market
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Borghans, Lex; Weel, Bas ter; Weinberg, Bruce A. – Journal of Human Resources, 2008
This paper develops a framework of the role of interpersonal interactions in the labor market. Effective interpersonal interactions involve caring and directness. The ability to perform these tasks varies with personality and the importance of these tasks varies across jobs. An assignment model shows that people are most productive in jobs that…
Descriptors: Interpersonal Communication, Labor Market, Interpersonal Relationship, Foreign Countries
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Couch, Kenneth A.; Dunn, Thomas A. – Journal of Human Resources, 1997
Comparison of U.S. Panel Study of Income Dynamics and German Socioeconomic Panel data found similarities in correlation of earnings and working hours for fathers and sons. Correlation for daughters and mothers was stronger in the United States, where more women are in the labor force. Intergenerational correlations in educational attainment were…
Descriptors: Children, Comparative Analysis, Correlation, Educational Attainment