| Claudio E. Montenegro is an Economist and Statistician with the World Bank's Development Research Group. He has held several positions at the University of Chile in Santiago, the Inter-American Development Bank, and the World Bank. He has a Masters degree in Economics from the University of Maryland at College Park and a Masters degree in Statistics from George Washington University. Works by this author: "Job Security and the Age Composition of Employment: Evidence from Chile," Submitted for publication to Journal of Development Economics (with Carmen Pagés). "Regionalism in the Nineties: The Nafta Case," Submitted for publication to World Bank Research Observer (with Isidro Soloaga). "Who Benefits from Labor Market Regulations and Institutions?: Chile 1960-1998." 2004. In James J. Heckman and Carmen Pagès (eds.) "Law and Employment: Lessons from Latin American and the Caribbean." Chicago: University of Chicago Press, pp. 401-434. "Crafting Labor Policy: Techniques and Lessons from Latin America." 2002. New York: World Bank and Oxford University Press (with Indermit S. Gill and Dörte Dömeland). "Responding to Earnings Differentials in Chile." 2002. In Indermit S. Gill, Claudio E. Montenegro, and Dörte Dömeland (eds.), "Crafting Labor Policy: Techniques and Lessons from Latin America." New York: World Bank and Oxford University Press, pp. 159-189 (with Indermit S. Gill). "Dealing with Employment Instability in Chile." 2002. In Indermit S. Gill, Claudio E. Montenegro, and Dörte Dömeland (eds.), "Crafting Labor Policy: Techniques and Lessons from Latin America." New York: World Bank and Oxford University Press, pp. 191-214 (with Indermit S. Gill, Erik Haindl, and Claudio Sapelli). "What Determines the Quality of Institutions?" (2002). World Bank Policy Research Working Paper Series # 2764 (with Roumeen Islam). "Wage Distribution in Chile: Does Gender Matter? A Quantile Regression Approach." (2001). The World Bank, Policy Research Report on Gender and Development Working Paper Series # 20, World Bank, Washington, D.C. "Time Series Analysis of Export Demand Equations: A Cross-Country Analysis" (1999), IMF Staff Papers, Vol. 46, # 3, pp. 259-273 (with Abdelhak S. Semlali). A previous version of the paper appeared as: "A Cointegration Approach to the Estimation of Structural Export Demand Equations: A Cross-Country Comparison" (1998), International Monetary Fund Working Paper # 149. "North American Integration and Factor Price Equalization: Is There Evidence of Wage Convergence Between Mexico and the United States?" (1998), in Imports, Exports and the American Worker, ed. Susan M. Collins, The Brookings Institution, pp. 305-347 (with Ana L. Revenga). "The Structure of Wages in Chile 1960 - 1996: An Application of Quantile Regression" (1998), Estudios de EconomÃa, Vol. 25, # 1, pp. 71-98. "Aggregate Agricultural Supply Response in Developing Countries: Critical Survey and Empirical Analysis" (1997), Economic Development and Cultural Change, Vol. 45, # 2, pp. 393-410 (with Maurice Schiff). "How Distorted is Cuba's Trade? Evidence and Predictions from a Gravity Model" (1996), Journal of International Trade and Economic Development, Vol. 5, # 1, pp. 45-68 (with Raimundo Soto). "Gains and Losses from the Bilateral Trading Arrangements with Argentina and Brazil" (1994), in Essays on the Effects of Protectionism on A Small Country: the Case of Uruguay, ed. M. Connolly and J. de Melo. World Bank Regional and Sectoral Studies, pp. 81-107 (with Jaime de Melo and W. Takacs). "L'Integration Regionale Hier et Aujourd'hui" (1993), Revue d'Économie du Développement, Vol. 1, # 2, pp. 1-49 (with Jaime de Melo and A. Panagariya). English version: "Regional Integration, Old and New" (1992), World Bank Policy Research Working Papers # 985. "An Application of Stochastic Multivariate Models to the Prediction of Failures in Latin American Firms" (1989), Paradigmas en Administración (14), 1989, pp. 33-75, (with M. Basch). |