2013
DOI: 10.1111/bjir.12023
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The Greek Public Sector Wage Premium before the Crisis: Size, Selection and Relative Valuation of Characteristics

Abstract: We examine the Greek public-private wage differential before the debt crisis to evaluate the prospective impact of the recent public sector pay cuts. We find a large public premium which persists after controlling for individual and job characteristics. For men, much of this is accounted for by self-selection into the sector that rewards better their characteristics, while for women it is largely driven by sectoral differences in returns. We attribute these effects to more egalitarian pay structures in the pub… Show more

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Cited by 37 publications
(28 citation statements)
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“…The public-private sector pay gap has been researched for many years, with a history that goes back to at least the early 1970s in America (Ehrenbergh & Schwarz, 1986). The topic has captured rising attention from researchers elsewhere during the last two decades (Poterba & Rueben, 1994;Borland et al, 1998;Mueller, 1998;Blackaby et al, 1999;Melly, 2005;Lucifora & Meurs, 2006;Elliott et al, 2007;Christopoulou & Monastiriotis, 2013;Lausev, 2014;Nikolic, 2014). Four main findings show up regularly in prior studies: on average, public sector workers receive higher pay than private sector workers; this pay gap is larger for women than for men; the distribution of pay among public sector workers is more compressed than for the private sector and hence the pay gap in favour of public sector workers is highest for those lower down the pay distribution; and the pay gap varies by geographical regions within nations.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The public-private sector pay gap has been researched for many years, with a history that goes back to at least the early 1970s in America (Ehrenbergh & Schwarz, 1986). The topic has captured rising attention from researchers elsewhere during the last two decades (Poterba & Rueben, 1994;Borland et al, 1998;Mueller, 1998;Blackaby et al, 1999;Melly, 2005;Lucifora & Meurs, 2006;Elliott et al, 2007;Christopoulou & Monastiriotis, 2013;Lausev, 2014;Nikolic, 2014). Four main findings show up regularly in prior studies: on average, public sector workers receive higher pay than private sector workers; this pay gap is larger for women than for men; the distribution of pay among public sector workers is more compressed than for the private sector and hence the pay gap in favour of public sector workers is highest for those lower down the pay distribution; and the pay gap varies by geographical regions within nations.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In result, public sector employees with identical skills and job content often earned very different wages across different segments of the public sector -and almost invariably significantly higher wages than their private sector counterparts even in similar sectors and occupations (Christopoulou and Monastiriotis, 2014). A manifestation of this can be found in the evolution of wages and productivity, prior to the crisis, in sectors with strong public employment presence vis-à-vis the rest of the economy.…”
Section: A Brief Outline Of the Crisismentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Following common practice, we take the mean value of the bundles as a proxy for each individual's monthly wage. Although clearly imperfect, this is the only possible way to analyse wages in Greece and it has been shown by Christopoulou and Monastiriotis (2014) to produce robust estimates of Mincer equations when using alternative methods of estimation (OLS and interval regressions).…”
Section: Data and Descriptive Patternsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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