Search results for "wage"

showing 10 items of 731 documents

School aspirations, cognitive skills and wage expectations of French Undergraduates

2013

en ligne : http://cemapre.iseg.utl.pt/educonf/2e3/files/submissions_to_web/Bonnard%20Claire_%20Giret%20Jean-Francois_Lambert-Le%20Mener%20Marielle.pdf; This paper aims to study the earnings expectations of first-year students at a French university and to compare them with the observed earnings of young people in the labour market for that same year. Our findings highlight the importance of the environment in which students make their choices about education. Expected earnings are proportionally higher when their parents seem to be involved in the careers guidance, even controlling for the effect of parental socio-economic status. The positive opinion of parents about the orientation or the…

Wage expectationsCompétence cognitive[SHS.EDU]Humanities and Social Sciences/Education[SHS.EDU] Humanities and Social Sciences/EducationJEL: J - Labor and Demographic Economics/J.J3 - Wages Compensation and Labor Costs/J.J3.J30 - GeneralPrévisionÉtudiant[ SHS.EDU ] Humanities and Social Sciences/Educationfirst year students[SHS.ECO]Humanities and Social Sciences/Economics and FinanceSalairecognitive skillsJEL: J - Labor and Demographic Economics/J.J2 - Demand and Supply of Labor/J.J2.J24 - Human Capital • Skills • Occupational Choice • Labor ProductivityJEL : J - Labor and Demographic Economics/J.J2 - Demand and Supply of Labor/J.J2.J24 - Human Capital • Skills • Occupational Choice • Labor ProductivityJEL : J - Labor and Demographic Economics/J.J3 - Wages Compensation and Labor Costs/J.J3.J30 - General[ SHS.ECO ] Humanities and Social Sciences/Economies and financesAnalyse prévisionnelleUniversité/[SHS.ECO] Humanities and Social Sciences/Economics and FinanceSupérieur premier cycle
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Deskilling and decline in skill premium during the age of sail : Swedish and Finnish seamen, 1751–1913

2016

The study examines the evolution of skill premium and share at industry level in shipping during the age of sail. We argue that the period from the 1750s to the 1910s represented deskilling for the seamen working in sailing ships. The growth of international trade and shipping during the first era of globalization increased the overall demand for sailors but decreased the relative demand for skilled labor in favor of less skilled ones. This deskilling was associated with a decline in wage inequality, as the premium for high skilled seamen fell relative to mean wages in the shipping industry. The decline in skill premium may have facilitated the growth of trade and shipping, as the relative …

Wage inequalityEconomics and EconometricsHistoryLabour economics060106 history of social sciencesmerihistoriatechnological changehistoriaTechnical changeGlobalization0502 economics and businessEconomicsmaritime historyta6150601 history and archaeology050207 economicsProductivity changeDeskillingTechnological changeoccupationsdeskilling05 social sciencesteknologinen kehitys06 humanities and the artsskill premiumGreat DivergencemerenkulkuMaritime history
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Comparing past and present wage inequality in two globalisation periods

2013

Abstract This paper compares past and present globalisation with an aim to highlighting the different factors that drove wage inequality then and those which are doing so now. We have constructed a ratio of wage inequality for 15 countries in the first period of globalisation (1870–1913) and the subsequent period of deglobalisation (1914–1930) and then compare this pattern to wage inequality in the 1980s and 1990s. We propose that the difference in wage inequality trends for the two globalisation periods is due to migration and institutional factors (education and labour market institutions). These factors offset the increase in wage inequality produced by globalisation and technological ch…

Wage inequalityHistoryLabour economicsGlobalizationArts and Humanities (miscellaneous)Technological changeGeography Planning and DevelopmentEconomicsAerospace EngineeringScandinavian Economic History Review
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Plant Productivity Dispersion and the College Premium: Evidence from the United States 1977-1997

2015

For the United States in 1987-2014, I document at business cycle frequencies that the high-skill workers’ employer size wage premium is high (low) in times of low (high) unemployment relative to that of the low-skill workers. Specifically, the differential employer size wage premium between high-skill and low-skill workers has an unconditional correlation of -0.4 with the unemployment rate, and varies by about 6 percent over the business cycle. The skill premium itself does not exhibit a clear business cycle pattern over the sample period.

Wage inequalityLabour economicsCurrent Population Surveymedia_common.quotation_subjecteducationWageDifferential (mechanical device)Sample (statistics)behavioral disciplines and activitiesUnemploymentBusiness cycleUnemployment rateBusinesshealth care economics and organizationsmedia_commonSSRN Electronic Journal
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Technology Diffusion, Worker Mobility and the Returns to Skill

2015

In this paper I illustrate how the diffusion across firms of a skill-neutral technology leads to a skill-biased impact on the economy. The model identifies (i) differences in inter-firm mobility between skill groups, (ii) productivity dispersion across firms within industries, and (iii) differences in wages between small and large firms as key determinants of the skill premium. Calibrated to match differences in inter-firm mobility between skill groups and rising productivity dispersion across firms, the model ascribes one-third of the sharp increase in the skill premium in U.S. manufacturing from 1977 to 1997 to skill-neutral technical progress and the technology diffusion process itself. …

Wage inequalityLabour economicsEconomicsStatistical dispersionDiffusion (business)ProductivityTechnical changeTechnical progressSSRN Electronic Journal
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Globalization, Worker Mobility and Wage Inequality

2015

In the present paper, I integrate frictional labor markets with on-the-job search into an otherwise standard heterogeneous firm model of intra-industry trade. Most importantly, I show that the returns to workers’ inter-firm mobility are higher in a trade equilibrium than in autarky. Intuitively, by favoring large and productive firms, international trade amplifies the disparities in profitability between small and large firms. Hence, the returns to labor reallocation across firms rise. In view of the empirically observed higher inter-firm mobility among high-skill workers, this suggests a skill-biased impact of trade liberalization.

Wage inequalityLabour economicsGlobalizationComputingMilieux_THECOMPUTINGPROFESSIONEconomicsSortingProfitability indexAutarkyFree tradeSSRN Electronic Journal
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Small Employers, Large Employers and the Skill Premium

2015

I document the comovement of the skill premium with the differential employer size wage premium between high- and low-skill workers in U.S. manufacturing during the postwar era. For the baseline specification, i.e., establishments with at least 500 employees categorized as large employers and non-production workers as high-skilled, I obtain a correlation coefficient of 0.87. Exploiting variations across subindustries while controlling for other potentially relevant factors, I estimate that an increase by ten log-points in the differential size premium is associated with an increase in the skill premium by three log-points.

Wage inequalityLabour economicsmedia_common.quotation_subjectWageEconomicsDifferential (mechanical device)Baseline (configuration management)Size premiummedia_commonSSRN Electronic Journal
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Spatial aggregation and resampling expansion of big surveys: An analysis of wage inequality

2020

Income inequality is becoming a growing concern, worldwide, with wage inequality being the root cause of its recent escalation. With the aim of adding to the knowledge on this subject, this paper focuses on the spatial dimension of the problem, an aspect which has received less attention in the literature. We identify the determinants of inequality in wage distribution in Spain at a provincial level using the microdata of the Structure of Earnings Survey (N = 216,769) and estimate their impact from a spatial perspective. Spatial computation of wage concentrations, however, reduces the sample size to just 52 observations, leading to model challenges. To overcome this problem, we adopt a supe…

Wage inequalityWelfare economicsPolitical science0502 economics and business05 social sciencesGeography Planning and Development0211 other engineering and technologiesSpatial aggregation021107 urban & regional planning02 engineering and technology050207 economicsManagement Monitoring Policy and LawDevelopmentRegional Science Policy & Practice
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Wage penalties for post-secondary education interruption in France

2017

International audience; In France, more and more young people are interrupting their post-secondary education (Mora, 2014) even if re-entering higher education implies all kinds of costs. Yet, little attention has been given so far to the eect of temporary dropout on future wages but it has been studied in other countries. We have attempted to measure the net effect of schooling discontinuities on young wages on the basis of a study of a sample of youth who left post-secondary education in 1998 and returned a few years later. Firstly, from an OLS regression, temporary interruption seems to have a positive effect on wages. However, people who interrupted temporary their education could have …

Wage penaltyinterruption[SHS.EDU]Humanities and Social Sciences/Education[SHS.EDU] Humanities and Social Sciences/Educationpost-secondary education[ SHS.EDU ] Humanities and Social Sciences/EducationFrance
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Effect of pH and nitrite concentration on nitrite oxidation rate

2011

The effect of pH and nitrite concentration on the activity of the nitrite oxidizing bacteria (NOB) in an activated sludge reactor has been determined by means of laboratory batch experiments based on respirometric techniques. The bacterial activity was measured at different pH and at different total nitrite concentrations (TNO 2). The experimental results showed that the nitrite oxidation rate (NOR) depends on the TNO 2 concentration independently of the free nitrous acid (FNA) concentration, so FNA cannot be considered as the real substrate for NOB. NOB were strongly affected by low pH values (no activity was detected at pH 6.5) but no inhibition was observed at high pH values (activity wa…

Waste component removalPH rangeUnclassified drugRespirometric techniqueLaboratory methodPHOxidation ratesPH valueNitriteSaturation constantBatch reactorPH effectOxidation kineticsDissociation constantNitrobacterKinetic expressionWaste Disposal FluidInhibition constantschemistry.chemical_compoundBacteriumBioreactorsNitrous acidNitriteBacterial activityReaction kineticsBacteria (microorganisms)Waste Management and DisposalIn Situ Hybridization FluorescenceInhibitionPriority journalFree nitrous acidMicroscopyNitrous acidSewagebiologyFluorescence in situ hybridizationPH effectsGeneral MedicineSaturationRespirometryHydrogen-Ion ConcentrationInorganic acidsNitrite oxidizing bacteriaCalibrationOxidation-ReductionEnvironmental EngineeringInorganic chemistryBioreactorParameterizationBioengineeringActivated sludge reactorsArticleNumerical modelNitrous acid derivativeReaction rateParameter calibrationBatch experimentsNitrite-oxidizing bacteriaOxidationDietary NitrateNitritesTECNOLOGIA DEL MEDIO AMBIENTEExperimental studyBacteriaConcentration (process)Renewable Energy Sustainability and the EnvironmentBacteriologyNitrobacterOxidation reductionNitrogen removalConcentration (composition)biology.organism_classificationInorganic acidsMicrobial activityKineticschemistryActivated sludgeNitrite oxidationHigh pH valueSwitch functionConcentration (parameters)Oxidation processEffect of pHProtein expressionSubstrateControlled studyWaste disposalBioresource Technology
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