Author:
ELLINGTON MICHAEL,MARTIN CHRIS,WANG BINGSONG
Abstract
AbstractIn this paper, we provide empirical evidence that real wage rigidity is not a major cause of unemployment volatility. We argue that there is a disconnect between the theoretical and empirical literatures on this topic. While theoretical studies define real wage rigidity as the response of wages to changes in unemployment following productivity shocks, the empirical literature measures real wage rigidity as the estimated semi‐elasticity of wages with respect to unemployment, averaged over all shocks. We show that averaging over shocks gives a biased measure of real wage rigidity, as the impact of other shocks confounds the response to productivity shocks. Our results indicate that the estimated semi‐elasticity with respect to productivity shocks is twice as large as the estimated semi‐elasticity averaged over all shocks. This implies that one cannot attribute unemployment volatility to real wage rigidity.
Subject
Economics and Econometrics,Finance,Accounting
Reference27 articles.
1. Why Are the Wages of Job Changers So Procyclical?
2. Building a composite Help-Wanted Index
3. Unconventional Monetary Policy and the Great Recession: Estimating the Macroeconomic Effects of a Spread Compression at the Zero Lower Bound;Baumeister Christiane;International Journal of Central Banking,2013
4. Real Wages over the Business Cycle: Evidence from Panel Data
5. Labor Markets and Monetary Policy: A New Keynesian Model with Unemployment