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Rising wage inequality the role of composition and prices
Content Provider | Library of Congress - Books/Printed Material |
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Author | Autor, David H. Katz, Lawrence F. |
Spatial Coverage | United States |
Temporal Coverage | 2005 |
Copyright Year | 2005 |
Abstract | "During the early 1980s, earnings inequality in the U.S. labor market rose relatively uniformly throughout the wage distribution. But this uniformity gave way to a significant divergence starting in 1987, with upper-tail (90/50) inequality rising steadily and lower tail (50/10) inequality either flattening or compressing for the next 16 years (1987 to 2003). This paper applies and extends a quantile decomposition technique proposed by Machado and Mata (2005) to evaluate the role of changing labor force composition (in terms of education and experience) and changing labor market prices to the expansion and subsequent divergence of upper- and lower-tail inequality over the last three decades We show that the extended Machado-Mata quantile decomposition corrects shortcomings of the original Juhn-Murphy-Pierce (1993) full distribution accounting method and nests the kernel reweighting approach proposed by DiNardo, Fortin and Lemieux (1996). Our analysis reveals that shifts in labor force composition have positively impacted earnings inequality during the 1990s. But these compositional shifts have primarily operated on the lower half of the earnings distribution by muting a contemporaneous, countervailing lower-tail price compression. The steady rise of upper tail inequality since the late 1970s appears almost entirely explained by ongoing between-group price changes (particularly increasing wage differentials by education) and residual price changes"--National Bureau of Economic Research web site. |
Language | English |
Publisher | National Bureau of Economic Research |
Publisher Place | Cambridge, MA |
Part of Series | Catalog |
Requires | HTML5 supported browser |
Access Restriction | Open |
Subject Keyword | Economic Aspects Education Income Distribution Labor Costs United States Wage Differentials Wages |
Subject Domain (in LCSH) | Wages--United States |
Subject Domain (in LCSH) | Wage differentials--United States |
Subject Domain (in LCSH) | Income distribution--United States |
Subject Domain (in LCSH) | Education--Economic aspects--United States |
Subject Domain (in LCSH) | Labor costs--United States |
Subject Domain (in LCC) | HB1 |
Content Type | Text |
Resource Type | Book |