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Supply and Demand Factors in Understanding the Educational Earnings Differentials: West Germany and the United States

Gulgun Bayaz Ozturk

European Journal of Comparative Economics, 2011, vol. 8, issue 2, 235-263

Abstract: This paper uses data from the March Current Population Survey and German Socio-Economic Panel to investigate the role of market forces and the institutional constraints in explaining the educational earnings differentials in the United States and West Germany. We make use of simple supply and demand framework to differentiate the effects of market forces from wage-setting institutions. Results indicate that differential growth in the relative employment of skilled workers is responsible for the differences in returns to skill in both countries over the period of analysis. In particular, rising educational attainment is the major factor underlying the changes in the employment of skilled workers in each country and it is followed by institutional factors. However, in addition to the differential growth in relative demand for skilled labor, differences in wage-setting institutions explain most of the cross-country differences in skill premia. We also provide evidence for polarization of jobs which is a recent phenomenon in both labor markets.

Keywords: Earnings differentials; relative demand and supply of skills; skill premium; polarization. (search for similar items in EconPapers)
JEL-codes: J24 J30 J31 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2011
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European Journal of Comparative Economics is currently edited by Matteo Migheli, Giovanni Ramello, Koji Domon, Peter Grajzl, David M. Kemme, Marcello Signorelli and Richard Watt

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