Global Labor Market Power

Serie

  • CEPR Discussion Papers

Resumen

  • We estimate labor market power using over 13,000 observations of manufacturing firms across 82 low and middle-income countries around the world. Within local labor markets, larger and more productive firms have higher wage markdowns and pay lower wages. Labor market power across countries exhibits a mild non-linear relationship with GDP per capita, entirely driven by a strong hump-shaped relationship with the share of self-employed workers. Labor market institutions fully account for the hump shape: in countries with unemployment protection, wage markdowns increase with the share of self-employment while the opposite is true in countries without it. We explain this finding through the lens of a simple oligopsonistic labor market model with frictions. Self-employment prevalence correlates with the elasticity of labor supply to the wage paid, and labor market institutions can change the sign of this relationship.

fecha de publicación

  • 2024

Líneas de investigación

  • Development
  • Labor market institutions
  • Labor market power
  • Self-employment

Issue

  • 18828