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Labor Economics 6th Edition George J Borjas

  • SKU: BELL-4962640
Labor Economics 6th Edition George J Borjas
$ 31.00 $ 45.00 (-31%)

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Labor Economics 6th Edition George J Borjas instant download after payment.

Publisher: McGraw-Hill/Irwin
File Extension: PDF
File size: 3.51 MB
Pages: 592
Author: George J. Borjas
ISBN: 9780073523200, 0073523208
Language: English
Year: 2013
Edition: 6

Product desciption

Labor Economics 6th Edition George J Borjas by George J. Borjas 9780073523200, 0073523208 instant download after payment.

Labor Economics, Sixth Edition by George J. Borjas provides a modern introduction to labor economics, emphasizing both theory and empirical evidence. The book uses many examples drawn from state-of-the-art studies in labor economics literature. The author introduces, through examples, methodological techniques that are commonly used in labor economics to empirically test various aspects of the theory. New and hallmark features of the text include
Preface:
The original motivation for writing Labor Economics grew out of my years of teaching
labor economics to undergraduates. After trying out many of the textbooks in the market, it
seemed to me that students were not being exposed to what the essence of labor economics
was about: to try to understand how labor markets work. As a result, I felt that students did
not really grasp why some persons choose to work, while other persons withdraw from the
labor market; why some firms expand their employment at the same time that other firms
are laying off workers; or why earnings are distributed unequally in most societies.
The key difference between Labor Economics and competing textbooks lies in its philosophy.
I believe that knowing the story of how labor markets work is, in the end, more important
than showing off our skills at constructing elegant models of the labor market or remembering
hundreds of statistics and institutional details summarizing labor market conditions
at a particular point in time.
I doubt that many students will (or should!) remember the mechanics of deriving a labor
supply curve or the way that the unemployment rate is officially calculated 10 or 20 years
after they leave college. However, if students could remember the story of the way the labor
market works—and, in particular, that workers and firms respond to changing incentives
by altering the amount of labor they supply or demand—the students would be much better
prepared to make informed opinions about the many proposed government policies that
can have a dramatic impact on labor market opportunities, such as a “workfare” program
requiring that welfare recipients work or a payroll tax assessed on employers to fund a
national health care program or a guest worker program that grants tens of thousands of
entry visas to high-skill workers. The exposition in this book, therefore, stresses the ideas
that labor economists use to understand how the labor market works.
The book also makes extensive use of labor market statistics and reports evidence
obtained from hundreds of research studies. These data summarize the stylized facts that a
good theory of the labor market should be able to explain, as well as help shape our thinking
about the way the labor market works. The main objective of the book, therefore, is to
survey the field of labor economics with an emphasis on both theory and facts. The book
relies much more heavily on “the economic way of thinking” than competing textbooks.
I believe this approach gives a much better understanding of labor economics than an
approach that minimizes the story-telling aspects of economic theory.

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