J - Labor and Demographic Economics - Bank of Canada
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Bank of Canada RSS Feedsen2024-03-28T12:31:20+00:00Poignée de main invisible et persistance des cycles économiques : une revue de la littérature
https://www.bankofcanada.ca/2003/12/working-paper-2003-40/
The author explains how self-enforcing labour contracts can enhance the performance of macroeconomic models. He exposes the benefits of using these dynamic contracts to account for some puzzling macroeconomic facts regarding the dynamics and persistence of employment, consumption and output.2003-12-04T14:47:41+00:00frPoignée de main invisible et persistance des cycles économiques : une revue de la littérature2003-12-04Business fluctuations and cyclesEconomic modelsWorking Paper 2003-40https://www.bankofcanada.ca/wp-content/uploads/2010/02/wp03-40.pdfPoignée de main invisible et persistance des cycles économiques : une revue de la littératureChristian CalmèsDecember 2003EE1E12E4E49JJ3J30J31J4J41Do Peer Group Members Outperform Individual Borrowers? A Test of Peer Group Lending Using Canadian Micro-Credit Data
https://www.bankofcanada.ca/2003/10/working-paper-2003-33/
Microfinance institutions now serve over 10 million poor households in the developing and developed world, and much of their success has been attributed to their innovative use of peer group lending. There is very little empirical evidence, however, to suggest that group lending schemes offer a superior institutional design over lending programs that serve individual borrowers.2003-10-04T14:22:52+00:00enDo Peer Group Members Outperform Individual Borrowers? A Test of Peer Group Lending Using Canadian Micro-Credit Data2003-10-04Development economicsWorking Paper 2003-33 https://www.bankofcanada.ca/wp-content/uploads/2010/02/wp03-33.pdfDo Peer Group Members Outperform Individual Borrowers? A Test of Peer Group Lending Using Canadian Micro-Credit DataRafael GomezEric SantorOctober 2003EJJ2J23OO1O17Technological Change and the Education Premium in Canada: Sectoral Evidence
https://www.bankofcanada.ca/2003/07/working-paper-2003-18/
It has been well documented that the education premium measured by the wage difference between university and high school graduates has remained constant over the past two decades in Canada. Despite this stable pattern at the aggregate level, skill-biased technology could have important implications for the inter-industry wage structure.2003-07-01T12:18:32+00:00enTechnological Change and the Education Premium in Canada: Sectoral Evidence2003-07-01Labour marketsWorking Paper 2003-18 https://www.bankofcanada.ca/wp-content/uploads/2010/02/wp03-18.pdfTechnological Change and the Education Premium in Canada: Sectoral EvidenceJean FarèsTerence YuenJuly 2003JJ3J31OO3O30