2020
DOI: 10.1093/qje/qjaa016
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Wages and the Value of Nonemployment*

Abstract: Nonemployment is often posited as a worker’s outside option in wage-setting models such as bargaining and wage posting. The value of nonemployment is therefore a key determinant of wages. We measure the wage effect of changes in the value of nonemployment among initially employed workers. Our quasi-experimental variation in the value of nonemployment arises from four large reforms of unemployment insurance (UI) benefit levels in Austria. We document that wages are insensitive to UI benefit changes: point estim… Show more

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Cited by 53 publications
(21 citation statements)
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References 98 publications
(141 reference statements)
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“…In the public economics literature, the received wisdom, based on the canonical competitive labor market model, is that the incidence of payroll taxes, even if nominally paid by employers, ultimately falls on workers' net market wages, leaving firms' gross labor costs unchanged. 2 In this paper, we analyze a large, long-lasting employer-borne payroll tax cut for young workers in Sweden. At the market level, we fully reject the sharp differentials in wages predicted by the canonical model: the directly treated young workers' market wages show no increase at all relative to the slightly older ineligible control group.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…In the public economics literature, the received wisdom, based on the canonical competitive labor market model, is that the incidence of payroll taxes, even if nominally paid by employers, ultimately falls on workers' net market wages, leaving firms' gross labor costs unchanged. 2 In this paper, we analyze a large, long-lasting employer-borne payroll tax cut for young workers in Sweden. At the market level, we fully reject the sharp differentials in wages predicted by the canonical model: the directly treated young workers' market wages show no increase at all relative to the slightly older ineligible control group.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The United States has a history of targeted employer credits for disadvantaged groups(Katz 1998). Several European countries have experimented with payroll tax cuts for the young or the elderly (see, e.g., OECD 2017) 2. The underlying assumption is that aggregate labor demand is much more elastic than aggregate labor supply (see, e.g.,Fullerton and Metcalf 2002).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…with φ denoting the employee bargaining power relative to the employer bargaining power (Jäger et al, 2020). The function V(p,w) is the lifetime expected utility of a worker who is employed at a firm with productivity p and receives wage w. Assume that the match-or firm-specific productivity at the current firm is p o .…”
Section: A Model On Wage Bargaining In Continuing Jobsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Many papers explore wage determinants based on the classic Nash bargaining model (Mortensen and Pissarides 1999;Burdett and Mortensen, 1998;Pissarides 2000, chapter 1; Michelacci and Suarez, 2006;Cahuc et al, 2006;Jäger et al, 2020). These wage bargaining and wage posting models "give primacy to the bargainers' outside options", in comparison to bargaining power and productivity as wage determinants (Hall and Krueger 2010).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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