Reservation wages and the wage flexibility puzzle
Koenig, Felix ; Manning, Alan ; Petrongolo, Barbara
London School of Economics and Political Science. Centre for Economic Performance
LSE - London
2014
50 p.
unemployment ; wage rate ; wages
CEP Discussion Paper
1319
Wages and wage payment systems
English
Bibliogr.
"Wages are only mildly cyclical, implying that shocks to labour demand have a larger short-run impact on unemployment rather than wages, at odds with the quantitative predictions of the canonical search and matching model. This paper provides an alternative perspective on the wage flexibility puzzle, explaining why the canonical model can only match the observed cyclicality of wages if the replacement ratio is implausibly high. We show that this failure remains even if wages are only occasionally renegotiated, unless the persistence in unemployment is implausibly low. We then provide some evidence that part of the problem comes from the implicit model for the determination of reservation wages. Estimates for the UK and West Germany provide evidence that reservation wages are much less cyclical than predicted even conditional on the observed level of wage cyclicality. We present evidence that elements of perceived “fairness” or “reference points” in reservation wages may address this model failure."
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