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Labor market institutions and wage inequality

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Article

Koeniger, Winfried ; Leonardi, Marco ; Nunziata, Luca

Industrial & Labor Relations Review

2007

60

3

April

340-356

comparison ; employment security ; statistics ; trade union ; unemployment benefit ; wage differential ; labour market policy

OECD countries

Wages and wage payment systems

English

Bibliogr.

"The authors investigate how labor market institutions such as unemployment insurance, unions, firing regulations, and minimum wages have affected the evolution of wage inequality among male workers. Results of estimations using data on institutions in eleven OECD countries indicate that changes in labor market institutions can account for much of the change in wage inequality between 1973 and 1998. Factors found to have been negatively associated with male wage inequality are union density, the strictness of employment protection law, unemployment benefit duration, unemployment benefit generosity, and the size of the minimum wage. Over the 26-year period, institutional changes were associated with a 15% reduction in male wage inequality in France, where minimum wages increased and employment protection became stricter, but with an increase of up to 13% in the United States and United Kingdom, where unions became less powerful and (in the United States) minimum wages fell."

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