AbrahamKatharine G.MaitlandAaronBianchiSuzanne M.2006. Nonresponse in the American Time Use Survey: Who is missing from the data and how much does it matter?Public Opinion Quarterly70(5: Special Issue): 676–703.
2.
BlackDan A.1995. Discrimination in an equilibrium search model. Journal of Labor Economics13(2): 309–33.
3.
BurdaMichael C.GenadekKatie R.HamermeshDaniel S.2020. Unemployment and effort at work. Economica87(347): 662–81.
4.
Bureau of Labor Statistics. 2021. American Time Use Survey User’s Guide: Understanding ATUS 2003 to 2020. Washington, DC: BLS, US Census Bureau.
5.
GelbachJonah. 2016. When do covariates matter? And which ones, and how much?Journal of Labor Economics34(2): 509–43.
6.
HamermeshDaniel. 2007. Viewpoint: Replication in economics. Canadian Journal of Economics40(3): 715–33.
7.
HamermeshDaniel S.GenadekKatie R.BurdaMichael C.2021. Racial/ethnic differences in non-work at work. ILR Review74(2): 272–92.
8.
HerndonThomasAshMichaelPollinRobert. 2014. Does high public debt consistently stifle economic growth? A critique of Reinhart and Rogoff. Cambridge Journal of Economics38(2): 257–79.
9.
LangKevinLehmannJee-Yeon K.2012. Racial discrimination in the labor market: Theory and empirics. Journal of Economic Literature50(4): 959–1006.
10.
ShapiroCarlStiglitzJoseph E.1984. Equilibrium unemployment as a worker discipline device. American Economic Review74(3): 433–44.