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Social Skills and the Individual Wage Growth of Less Educated Workers

Philippe Aghion, Antonin Bergeaud, Richard Blundell () and Rachel Griffith

No 18456, CEPR Discussion Papers from Centre for Economic Policy Research

Abstract: We use matched employee-employer data from the UK to highlight the importance of social skills, including the ability to work well in a team and communicate effectively with co-workers, as a driver for individual wage growth for workers with few formal educational qualifications. We show that lower educated workers in occupations where social skills are more important experience steeper wage growth with tenure, and also higher early exit rates, than equivalent workers in occupations where social skills are less important. Moreover, the return to tenure in occupations where social skills are important is stronger in firms with a larger share of higher educated workers. We rationalize our findings using a model of wage bargaining with complementarity between the skills and abilities of less educated workers and the firm’s other assets.

JEL-codes: J24 J31 L25 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2023-09
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Related works:
Working Paper: Social Skills and the Individual Wage Growth of Less Educated Workers (2024) Downloads
Working Paper: Social Skills and the Individual Wage Growth of Less Educated Workers (2024)
Working Paper: Social skills and the individual wage growth of less educated workers (2024) Downloads
Working Paper: Social skills and the individual wage growth of less educated workers (2023) Downloads
Working Paper: Social Skills and the Individual Wage Growth of Less Educated Workers (2023) Downloads
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