Search results for "Efficiency wage"

showing 7 items of 17 documents

When is there more employment, with individual or collective wage bargaining?

2019

Abstract In a standard Diamond-Mortensen-Pissarides labour market with frictions, the authors seek to determine when there is more employment with individual wage bargaining than with collective wage bargaining, using a wage equation generated by the standard total surplus sharing rule. Using a Cobb-Douglas production function, they find that if the bargaining power of the individual is high compared to the bargaining power of the union, there is more unemployment with individual wage setting and vice versa. When the individual worker and the union have the same bargaining power, if the cost of opening a vacancy is sufficiently high, there is more unemployment with individual wage setting. …

Labour economicsunemploymentmedia_common.quotation_subjectWageO41Social SciencesHindividual and collective wage settingEfficiency wageEconomicsddc:330Production (economics)e24matching frictionsHB71-74Individual and collective wage settingmedia_commonMarginal product of laboro41Bargaining powerEconomics as a scienceUnemploymentUnemploymentWage equationMatching frictionsE24General Economics Econometrics and FinanceTotal surplus
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Coping with Growth and Emigration: Latvian Labor Market Before and After EU Accession

2007

In 2002-2005, Latvian labor market has witnessed dramatic changes related both to unprecedented economic growth and to a massive outflow of labor force after EU enlargement in May 2004. This study, based on micro-level analysis of Latvian Labor Force surveys 2002-2005, provides a detailed analysis of these changes, with a particular focus on developments which are likely to improve living standards of formerly disadvantaged segments of population. The findings suggest that emerging shortage of labor has led to strong wage growth and reduction of unemployment. The author documents increased employment rates and improvements in labor market position of ethnic minorities, elderly, fixed-term w…

Market integrationeducation.field_of_studyLabour economicsmedia_common.quotation_subjectPopulationWageOccupational segregationStandard of livingLabor relationsEfficiency wageUnemploymentEconomicseducationmedia_commonSSRN Electronic Journal
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Culture at work: how culture affects workplace behaviors

2014

Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to give structure to the argument that “culture matters.” Further, the aim is to show how cultural differences shape the use of incentives within firms and point toward culturally affected degrees of efficiency. Design/methodology/approach – The paper incorporates differences in the evaluation of the stimuli money, order, and monitoring into a simple efficiency wage model. Profit maximizing firms are assumed. Findings – It is found that the use of incentives should respect the cultural surrounding. Data from a real-world analysis can partly be explained with this model, which was not done before. Research limitations/implications – The major limitation…

MicroeconomicsOrganizational Behavior and Human Resource ManagementIncentiveManagement of Technology and InnovationStrategy and ManagementEfficiency wageCultural diversityEconomicsEconomic modelPractical implicationsSocial psychologyProfit (economics)International Journal of Manpower
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Wage Cyclicality under Different Regimes of Industrial Relations

2010

Since there is scant evidence on the role of industrial relations in wage cyclicality, this paper analyzes the effect of collective wage contracts and of works councils on real wage growth. Using linked employer-employee data for western Germany, we find that works councils affect wage growth only in combination with collective bargaining. Wage adjustments to positive and negative economic shocks are not always symmetric. Only under sectoral bargaining there is a (nearly symmetric) reaction to rising and falling unemployment. In contrast, wage growth in establishments without collective bargaining adjusts only to falling unemployment and is unaffected by rising unemployment.

Organizational Behavior and Human Resource ManagementLabour economicsReallohnKonjunkturStrategy and Managementmedia_common.quotation_subjectwage cyclicality wage bargaining works council GermanyWageTarifpolitikwage bargainingCollective bargainingManagement of Technology and InnovationEfficiency wageGermanyEconomicsddc:330J31J53Industrial relationsDeutschlandmedia_commonE32Mitbestimmungjel:E32works counciljel:J31jel:J53Arbeitsbeziehungenwage cyclicalityIndustrial relationsUnemploymentWage growthwage cyclicalitywage bargainingworks councilGermanySchätzung
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The role of Institutions in explaining wage determination in the Euro Area: a panel cointegration approach

2016

Over the last 15 years, the evolution of labor costs has been very diverse across EMU countries. Since wages have important second-round effects on prices and competitiveness, and EMU countries do not have the tool of the nominal exchange rate to correct for such imbalances, understanding the determinants of the wage is a matter of increasing concern and debate. We estimate the equilibrium wage equation for the Euro Area over the period 1995-2011 using panel cointegration techniques that allow for cross-section dependence and structural breaks. The results show that the equilibrium wage has a positive relation with productivity and negative relation with unemployment, as expected. We also i…

Organizational Behavior and Human Resource ManagementLabour economicsStrategy and Managementmedia_common.quotation_subjectWagejel:C23Labor marketjel:E24panel cointegration wage setting labor marketExchange ratePanel cointegrationManagement of Technology and InnovationEfficiency wage0502 economics and businessEconomicsWage share050207 economicsProductivity050205 econometrics media_commonCointegration05 social sciencesWage settingjel:J31Economic interventionismUnemployment
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Firm-sponsored training in regulated labour markets: evidence from Spain

2005

Using data from the 1994 European Community Household Panel Survey, the author examines who receives formal firm-sponsored training in Spain. The author finds that the distribution of firm-sponsored training in the work force is uneven and concentrated among more skilled workers in the upper deciles of the wage distribution. The data show that the likelihood of receiving firm-sponsored training for a low education employee is much lower. Also, the better-educated employees in high wage occupations of the largest establishments have higher probabilities of receiving specific training. Spain has a highly regulated labour market, and the labour market frictions and institutions compress and di…

Panel surveyEconomics and EconometricsLabour economicsbusiness.industrymedia_common.quotation_subjectWageDistribution (economics)Training (civil)DecileIncentiveEfficiency wageEconomicsbusinessHigh wagemedia_commonApplied Economics
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Economics of wage premia and wage rigidity

2017

The focus of this dissertation is on the effects of specific employer characteristics on wages and wage rigidity and how these characteristics enter the wage-setting process. The dissertation includes an introductory chapter and five separate essays. The introduction provides motivation, background on the main keywords and an overview of the thesis. Chapters two and three study how internal references affect wages and wage rigidity from a theoretical perspective. The fourth chapter estimates the effect of firm size on wages in the Finnish labor market. Chapter five develops on the preceding and analyses how profit sharing schemes affect the firm size premium. Chapter six studies how interna…

palkkaerotfirm sizefairnessexternal referencewage premiuminternal referenceoikeudenmukaisuusyrityksetvoitotpalkatlabor unionsefficiency wageskokoammattiliitotprofit sharingwage rigidityvoitonjakopalkkaus
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