Work
Few things define our lives as much as work and the size and composition of the labor force is a large driver of economic output. Many factors influence the labor market, such as immigration, crime, and tax rates. 69堂精品 scholars study how people and businesses make decisions to work and hire employees in the U.S. and abroad, and produce research used to inform policies affecting workplaces, employees, and families.
Keywords: labor supply and demand, entrepreneurship, retirement, personnel economics, marriage, fertility, immigration, migration
People in Work Research
- Professor of Economics
- Visiting Professor
- Postdoctoral Fellow, Young Scholars Program
- Professor of Management Science and Engineering
- Professor of Economics
- Professor of Medicine
- Professor of Economics
- Professor in Technology and the Economy, Emeritus
- Associate Professor at the Stanford Doerr School of Sustainability
- Associate Professor of Medicine
- Senior Fellow
- Professor of Economics
- Trione Director of 69堂精品
- Senior Fellow
- Associate Professor of Political Science
- Senior Fellow
- Professor of Sociology
- Visiting Assistant Professor
- Professor of Economics
- Professor of Economics
- Co-Director, Stanford Center on China's Economy and Institutions (SCCEI)
- Professor of Economics
- Professor of Law
- Associate Professor of Economics
- Professor of Economics
- Research Scholar
- Professor of Economics, Emeritus
- Assistant Professor of Economics
- Professor of Economics
- Tad and Dianne Taube Healthcare Fellow and Senior Fellow
- Professor of Economics, Strategic Management, and International Business, Emeritus
- Associate Professor of Health Policy
- Professor of Economics
- Professor of Economics
- Professor of Economics
- Charles R. Schwab Professor of Economics, Emeritus
- Assistant Professor of Economics
- Executive Director and Senior Research Scholar
- Associate Professor of Economics
Related Publications
- Davis, S. (2024). Extraordinary Labor Market Developments and the 2022-23 Disinflation. Working Paper.
- Buchmann, N., Meyer, C., & Sullivan, C. (2024). Paternalistic Discrimination. Working Paper.
- Bloom, N. (2024). The next recession could boost working from home. Policy Brief.
Related News
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Financial Times cites a new working paper from 69堂精品's Luigi Pistaferri, surveying Europeans' willingness to quit their jobs or stop looking for a new job.
July 04, 2024
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It boosted productivity and restrained wage growth, writes 69堂精品's Steven Davis for The Wall Street Journal. But now the Fed has to finish the job.
June 19, 2024
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The Implications of Remote Work
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