The scientist’s investigation covers issues in Econometrics, Wage, Labour economics, Business economics and Unemployment. As a member of one scientific family, Jean-Marc Robin mostly works in the field of Econometrics, focusing on Wage dispersion and, on occasion, Structural estimation. As a part of the same scientific study, Jean-Marc Robin usually deals with the Wage, concentrating on Panel data and frequently concerns with Survey data collection.
His Labour economics study combines topics in areas such as Productivity, Competition, Statistical dispersion and Bargaining problem. His Statistical dispersion research incorporates elements of Efficiency wage and Labor mobility. His Unemployment study combines topics from a wide range of disciplines, such as Matching and Microeconomics.
His main research concerns Econometrics, Wage, Labour economics, Unemployment and Productivity. His research investigates the link between Econometrics and topics such as Statistics that cross with problems in Secondary education. The concepts of his Wage study are interwoven with issues in Matching, Production, Demographic economics and Search model.
His study in Labour economics is interdisciplinary in nature, drawing from both Business cycle, Competition, Structural estimation and Business economics. His biological study deals with issues like Bargaining power, which deal with fields such as Search theory. His studies deal with areas such as Statistical dispersion and Distribution as well as Productivity.
Wage, Production, Demographic economics, Marital status and Marriage market are his primary areas of study. Jean-Marc Robin has researched Wage in several fields, including Sorting, Econometrics, Unemployment and Distribution. His Econometrics research integrates issues from Productivity and Latent variable model, Latent class model.
His Unemployment study integrates concerns from other disciplines, such as Matching, Minimum wage and Economic inequality. His Matching research is multidisciplinary, incorporating elements of Code and Parallel computing. His studies in Production integrate themes in fields like Structural estimation and Labour economics.
Jean-Marc Robin focuses on Wage, Labour economics, Production, Estimator and Unemployment. His Wage research includes elements of Minimum wage, Economic inequality and Demographic economics. The Labour economics study combines topics in areas such as Panel data and Willingness to pay.
His Estimator research is multidisciplinary, incorporating perspectives in Mathematical optimization and Applied mathematics. In Unemployment, Jean-Marc Robin works on issues like Productivity, which are connected to Econometrics. His research in the fields of Endogeneity overlaps with other disciplines such as Quadratic equation.
This overview was generated by a machine learning system which analysed the scientist’s body of work. If you have any feedback, you can contact us here.
Equilibrium Wage Dispersion with Worker and Employer Heterogeneity
Fabien Postel-Vinay;Jean-Marc Robin.
Econometrica (2002)
Wage bargaining with on-the-job search: Theory and evidence
Pierre Cahuc;Fabien Postel-Vinay;Jean-Marc Robin.
Research Papers in Economics (2006)
Wages and informality in developing countries
Costas Meghir;Renata Narita;Jean-Marc Robin.
Research Papers in Economics (2012)
Equilibrium search with continuous productivity dispersion: theory and nonparametric estimation
Christian Bontemps;Jean Marc Robin;Gerard J. Van Den Berg.
International Economic Review (2000)
Estimation in large and disaggregated demand systems: an estimator for conditionally linear systems
Richard Blundell;Jean Marc Robin.
Journal of Applied Econometrics (1999)
An empirical equilibrium job search model with search on the job and heterogeneous workers and firms
Christian Bontemps;Jean Marc Robin;Gerard J. Van Den Berg.
International Economic Review (1999)
The dynamics of local employment in France
Pierre-Philippe Combes;Thierry Magnac;Jean-Marc Robin;Jean-Marc Robin.
Journal of Urban Economics (2004)
The Distribution of Earnings in an Equilibrium Search Model with State-Dependent Offers and Counteroffers
Fabien Postel-Vinay;Jean-Marc Robin.
Research Papers in Economics (2002)
TESTS OF RANK
Jean-Marc Robin;Richard J. Smith.
Econometric Theory (2000)
The empirical content of the job search model: Labor mobility and wage distributions in Europe and the US
Grégory Jolivet;Fabien Postel-Vinay;Jean-Marc Robin;Jean-Marc Robin.
European Economic Review (2006)
If you think any of the details on this page are incorrect, let us know.
We appreciate your kind effort to assist us to improve this page, it would be helpful providing us with as much detail as possible in the text box below:
Yale University
University of Bristol
University College London
École Nationale de la Statistique et de l'Administration Économique
Sciences Po
University College London
University of Cambridge
University of Wisconsin–Madison
University College London
The Ohio State University
Universitat Politècnica de València
IMT Nord Europe
Harvard University
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
KTH Royal Institute of Technology
Shanxi University
Shinshu University
University of British Columbia
Wellcome Sanger Institute
National Institutes of Natural Sciences
University of Salamanca
University of California, Berkeley
Charité - University Medicine Berlin
Public Health England
Spanish National Research Council
Aarhus University