Firming Up Inequality*

Author:

Song Jae1,Price David J2,Guvenen Fatih3,Bloom Nicholas4,von Wachter Till5

Affiliation:

1. Social Security Administration

2. University of Toronto

3. University of Minnesota, Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis, and National Bureau of Economic Research

4. Stanford University, National Bureau of Economic Research, and Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research

5. University of California, Los Angeles, and National Bureau of Economic Research

Abstract

Abstract We use a massive, matched employer-employee database for the United States to analyze the contribution of firms to the rise in earnings inequality from 1978 to 2013. We find that one-third of the rise in the variance of (log) earnings occurred within firms, whereas two-thirds of the rise occurred due to a rise in the dispersion of average earnings between firms. However, this rising between-firm variance is not accounted for by the firms themselves but by a widening gap between firms in the composition of their workers. This compositional change can be split into two roughly equal parts: high-wage workers became increasingly likely to work in high-wage firms (i.e., sorting increased), and high-wage workers became increasingly likely to work with each other (i.e., segregation rose). In contrast, we do not find a rise in the variance of firm-specific pay once we control for the worker composition in firms. Finally, we find that two-thirds of the rise in the within-firm variance of earnings occurred within mega (10,000+ employee) firms, which saw a particularly large increase in the variance of earnings compared with smaller firms.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Economics and Econometrics

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