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Estimating compensating wage differentials using voluntary job changes: evidence from Germany

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Article

Villanueva, Ernesto

Industrial & Labor Relations Review

2007

60

4

July

544-561

labour market ; labour mobility ; statistics ; wage differential

Germany

Wages and wage payment systems

English

Bibliogr.

"The author develops a model predicting that in a labor market that attaches a wage premium to jobs with a disamenity (a compensating wage differential), the premium's upper bound will be defined by the average wage change of voluntary job movers whose consumption of the disamenity rises as a result of their move; its lower bound, by the wage change of those whose consumption of the disamenity falls. These predictions will not hold if, as predicted by a "segmented" labor market model, the labor market attaches a wage penalty to workplace disamenities. Using longitudinal data on job characteristics and wages in Germany in 1984-2001, the author estimates the market returns to four workplace disamenities: heavy workload, job insecurity, poor hours regulation, and a mismatch between skills possessed and skills required. The results broadly support the existence of compensating differentials in the German labor market."

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