About AEI My AEI Support AEI Contact AEI
Home Events Books Short Publications Research Areas Scholars & Fellows


Search


FindAdvanced Search

Browse all books by:
- Date
- Subject
- Author
- Title

BOOKS
About the AEI Press
Orders and Shipping
Book Reviews
Press Releases

E-NEWSLETTERS
Enter e-mail:
 

Home >  Books >  Job Creation and Destruction
Job Creation and Destruction
Print Mail
Reprint Edition
By Steven J. Davis, John C. Haltiwanger, Scott Schuh
Posted: Tuesday, July 26, 2005
Job Creation and Destruction
Dimensions: 5.5'' x 8.7''
288 pages
MIT Press  (Cambridge)
Publication Date: January 1998
Paperback
ISBN: 0262540932
Hardcover
ISBN: 0262041529

"Davis, Haltiwanger, and Schuh's book is a wonderfully clear and detailed description of the creation and destruction of jobs. It will be the standard in a rapidly expanding literature in the U.S. and abroad on this subject."

--Bruce Meyer, Professor of Economics, Northwestern University

Job Creation and Destruction is the culmination of a long, ongoing research program at the Center for Economic Studies. Using the most complete plant-level data source currently available--the Longitudinal Research Data constructed by the Census Bureau--it focuses on the U.S. manufacturing sector from 1972 to 1988 and develops a statistical portrait of the microeconomic adjustments to the many economic events that affect businesses and workers. The picture that emerges is one of large, persistent, and highly concentrated gross job flows, with job destruction dominating the cyclical feaures of net job flows.

The authors describe in detail those characteristics that destroy and create jobs over time (including industry of origin, wage payments, international trade exposure, factor intensity, size, age, and productivity performance), while also providing a broader measure of the process that will be directly relevant to macroeconomists and policymakers.

Steven J. Davis is a professor of economics at the University of Chicago, John C. Haltiwanger is a professor of economics at the University of Maryland, and Scott Schuh is an economist at the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston.

Related Links
Order from Barnes and Noble
The Flow Approach to Labor Markets
Event: The Fluid Character of U.S. Labor Markets


Also by Steven J. Davis
Recent Articles
Adjusted Estimates of Worker Flows and Job Openings in JOLTS
Interpreting the Great Moderation
Electricity Pricing to U.S. Manufacturing Plants, 1963-2000
Russia's Revolution

Meticulously researched and textured with fascinating details, these essays "show" as well as "tell" where Russia has been in the past fifteen years and where it is going.


Of Men and Materiel: The Crisis in Military Resources

This book explores a problem that has been building quietly for years: the military has been expending without expanding or even replacing what has been spent.