10 Oct 2023
by Jim Rose
in discrimination, gender, human capital, labour economics, labour supply, occupational choice
Tags: gender wage gap, sex discrimination
WSJ on why Claudia Golden deserves the Econ Nobel prize: For M.B.A. students who graduated from the University of Chicago’s business school between 1990 and 2006, the authors found almost no gender gap in employment or wages just after graduation. But 10 years later, women had taken an average of one year off from work,…
No post-MBA gender gap, but after ten years…
10 Oct 2023
by Jim Rose
in applied price theory, discrimination, econometerics, economic history, gender, health economics, human capital, labour economics, labour supply, occupational choice
Tags: economics of fertility, gender wage gap, sex discrimination
09 Oct 2023
by Jim Rose
in applied price theory, discrimination, econometerics, economic history, gender, history of economic thought, human capital, labour economics, labour supply, occupational choice
Tags: gender wage gap, sex discrimination
09 Oct 2023
by Jim Rose
in applied price theory, discrimination, econometerics, economic history, gender, history of economic thought, human capital, labour economics, labour supply, occupational choice, poverty and inequality
Tags: gender wage gap, sex discrimination
29 Sep 2023
by Jim Rose
in applied price theory, discrimination, economic history, human capital, labour economics, labour supply, liberalism, Marxist economics, occupational choice, politics - USA, poverty and inequality, Public Choice, Thomas Sowell, unemployment
Tags: racial discrimination, sex discrimination
26 May 2023
by Jim Rose
in applied price theory, applied welfare economics, discrimination, econometerics, economic history, gender, human capital, labour economics, labour supply, occupational choice, poverty and inequality
Tags: sex discrimination
19 May 2023
by Jim Rose
in business cycles, comparative institutional analysis, development economics, economic history, economics of education, growth disasters, growth miracles, history of economic thought, human capital, labour economics, law and economics, macroeconomics, Milton Friedman, monetarism, monetary economics, Robert E. Lucas, unemployment
Tags: monetary policy
28 Mar 2023
by Jim Rose
in discrimination, economics of crime, economics of education, gender, health and safety, human capital, labour economics, labour supply, law and economics, occupational choice
Tags: gender wage gap, law and order, sex discrimination
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