Skill-Biased Firms and the Distribution of Labor Market Returns
Giovanni Gallipoli (),
Khalil Esmkhani and
Michael Böhm
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Khalil Esmkhani: UBC
Michael Böhm: Vancouver School of Economics and Univer
No 1199, 2019 Meeting Papers from Society for Economic Dynamics
Abstract:
How much do firms contribute to variation in labor market returns? To address this question we begin by documenting a historical episode that saw the economy-wide return to cognitive skills in Sweden surge in the 1990s and decline after 2000. Both upswing and reversal can be accounted for by between-firm variation. Motivated by this observation we develop and estimate an equilibrium model of skills demand with multi-dimensional firm heterogeneity. The model delivers sorting due to firm-specific skill-biases, which we estimate using rich population data on worker abilities. We find that: (i) the return to cognitive skills varies considerably across firms; (ii) more able workers sort into firms with higher returns; (iii) firm-specific wage premia, independent of workers' skills, exist even after controlling for worker sorting. A numerical implementation of the model shows that firm-level heterogeneity accounts for more than 2/3 of aggregate wage variation, with most of the impact due to skill-independent wage premia. However, firm-level skill-biases and non-pecuniary returns play a critical role for workers' sorting and for the evolution of the economy-wide return to skills.
Date: 2019
New Economics Papers: this item is included in nep-eur
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:red:sed019:1199
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