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Published byPolly Helena Skinner Modified over 9 years ago
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Wage Rate Differentials 1
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Competitive labour markets: Consider two markets with different wages If there is a free access to a market with higher wage, a worker will move there. It would increase the wages in the low-wage market (because of a reduction in labour supply), and decrease the wages in the high-wage market (because of an increase in labour supply). Yet we know there is non-trivial occupation wage structure. There must be something that prevents the worker’s move from one occupation to another 2
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Factors to explain wage differentials: Adjustment lag So there is a change in some exogenous variable The change shifts a curve in a market and leads to a new equilibrium If the workers do not move immediately, wage differential exists for a while This wage differential is temporary/transitional 3
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Labour market barriers: Restrictions on mobility We usually think regulation/law Licence requirement National border But other things may work, too Poor information about labour markets Discrimination Pre-market discrimination Market discrimination Detecting discrimination Does discrimination make sense? Geography Language Closed shop union Government regulation Education/training/licencing 4
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Compensating wage differentials Jobs that stink Risk of injury/illness Stress Wrong time shifts Lifting heavy things Risk of unemployment Unpleasant environment These produce compensating wage differentials Jobs that are great Opposite to bad Flexible hours Employment security Long vacations Status Fringe benefits These produce equalizing differences It’s all relative Can change within general equilibrium 5
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Personal characteristics Heterogeneous workers Education Talent/ability Are they ever independent variables? 6
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Discrimination Is male-female discrimination real? Part-time employment Education Experience If all one can account for is accounted for, the answer is not clear Statistical discrimination In competitive markets, discrimination by employers cannot persist It can persist in non-competitive markets Regulations to preserve discrimination Discrimination due to prejudice by workers may persist in any markets Anti-discriminatory policies are consequential 7
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