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References for Do workers work more when earnings are high?
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Further reading
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Key references
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Blundell, R., MaCurdy, T. "Labor supply: A
review of alternative approaches" Handbook of Labor
Economics 3 (1999): 1559−1695. Key reference: [1]
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Camerer, C., Babcock, L., Loewenstein, G., Thaler, R. "Labor supply of
New York City cabdrivers: One day at a time" The Quarterly
Journal of Economics 112:2 (1997): 407−441. Key reference: [2]
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Chou, Y. K. "Testing
alternative models of labour supply: Evidence from taxi drivers
in Singapore" The Singapore
Economic Review 47:1 (2002): 17−47. Key reference: [3]
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Farber, H. S. "Why you can’t find
a taxi in the rain and other labor supply lessons from cab
drivers" The Quarterly
Journal of Economics 130:4 (2015): 1975−2026. Key reference: [4]
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Fehr, E., Goette, L. "Do workers work
more if wages are high? Evidence from a randomized field
experiment" The American
Economic Review 97:1 (2007): 298−317. Key reference: [5]
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Oettinger, G. S. "An empirical
analysis of the daily labor supply of stadium vendors" Journal of
Political Economy 107:2 (1999): 360−392. Key reference: [6]
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Stafford, T. M. "What do fishermen
tell us that taxi drivers don’t? An empirical investigation of
labor supply" Journal of Labor
Economics 33:3 (2015): 683−710. Key reference: [7]
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Gine, X., Martinez-Bravo, M., Vidal-Fernandez, M. "Are labor supply
decisions consistent with neoclassical preferences? Evidence
from Indian boat owners" Journal of
Economic Behavior & Organization 142 (2017): 331−347. Key reference: [8]
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French, S., Stafford, T. M. Returns to
Experience and the Elasticity of Labor Supply UNSW Business
School Research Paper No.2017−15, 2017. Key reference: [9]
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Borjas, G. J. "The relationship
between wages and weekly hours of work: The role of division
bias" The Journal of
Human Resources 15:3 (1980): 409−423. Key reference: [10]
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Farber, H. S. "Reference-dependent preferences and labor supply: The case of
New York City taxi drivers" The American
Economic Review 98:3 (2008): 1069−1082. Key reference: [11]
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Crawford, V. P., Meng, J. "New York City cab
drivers’ labor supply revisited: Reference-dependent preferences
with rational-expectations targets for hours and income" The American
Economic Review 101:5 (2011): 1912−1932. Key reference: [12]
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Blundell, R., MaCurdy, T. "Labor supply: A
review of alternative approaches" Handbook of Labor
Economics 3 (1999): 1559−1695.