Staggered contracts and unemployment during recessions

Effrosyni Adamopoulou, Luis Díez-Catalán, Ernesto Villanueva
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

This paper studies the impact of downward wage rigidity on wage and employment dynamics after the outbreak of major recessions in Spain. Downward wage rigidity stems from collective agreements, which set province-sector-skill-specific minimum wage floors for all workers. By exploiting variation in the renewal of collective agreements, we find that those signed before the onset of recessions settle on higher nominal negotiated wage growth than agreements signed afterwards. Leveraging social security data and the distribution of the worker-level bite of minimum wage floors, we document that the negotiated wage rigidity translated into higher wage growth mainly among workers with near-floor wages. Consequently, these workers experienced a substantial and highly persistent increase in the probability of non-employment, but only if they were covered by long-duration collective agreements. Our findings highlight the interplay between rigidity at different parts of the wage distribution and labor market institutions and identify conditions under which collective contract staggering and the inability to renegotiate may amplify aggregate shocks.
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经济衰退期间的交错合同和失业问题
本文研究了西班牙经济大衰退爆发后工资下行刚性对工资和就业动态的影响。工资下行刚性源于集体协议,这些协议为所有工人设定了各省各部门各技能的最低工资底线。通过利用集体协议续签的变化,我们发现在经济衰退爆发前签订的协议与衰退爆发后签订的协议相比,名义协商工资增长率更高。利用社会保障数据和最低工资下限在工人层面的咬合分布,我们记录了谈判工资刚性主要在工资接近下限的工人中转化为较高的工资增长。因此,这些工人的非就业概率出现了大幅且高度持续的增长,但前提是他们受长期集体协议的保护。我们的研究结果凸显了工资分配不同部分的刚性与劳动力市场制度之间的相互作用,并确定了集体合同交错和无法重新谈判可能放大总体冲击的条件。
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