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Wage rigidity and employment outcomes: Evidence from administrative data

By: Ehrlich, Gabriel and Montes, Joshua.
Material type: materialTypeLabelBookPublisher: American Economic Journal: Macroeconomics Description: 16(1), Jan, 2024: p.147-206. In: American Economic Journal: MacroeconomicsSummary: This paper examines the relationship between downward nominal wage rigidity and employment outcomes using linked employer-employee data. Wage rigidity prevents 27.1 percent of counterfactual wage cuts, with a standard deviation of 19.2 percent across establishments. An establishment with the sample-average level of wage rigidity is predicted to have a 3.3 percentage point higher layoff rate, a 7.4 percentage point lower quit rate, and a 2.0 percentage point lower hire rate. Estimating a structural model by indirect inference implies that the cost of a nominal wage cut is 33 percent of an average worker's annual compensation.- Reproduced https://www.aeaweb.org/articles?id=10.1257/mac.20200125
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Articles Articles Indian Institute of Public Administration
16(1), Jan, 2024: p.147-206 Available AR131319

This paper examines the relationship between downward nominal wage rigidity and employment outcomes using linked employer-employee data. Wage rigidity prevents 27.1 percent of counterfactual wage cuts, with a standard deviation of 19.2 percent across establishments. An establishment with the sample-average level of wage rigidity is predicted to have a 3.3 percentage point higher layoff rate, a 7.4 percentage point lower quit rate, and a 2.0 percentage point lower hire rate. Estimating a structural model by indirect inference implies that the cost of a nominal wage cut is 33 percent of an average worker's annual compensation.- Reproduced

https://www.aeaweb.org/articles?id=10.1257/mac.20200125

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