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Macroeconomics of Racial Disparities: Discrimination, Labor Market, and Wealth

Guanyi Yang and Srinivasan Murali

Papers from arXiv.org

Abstract: This paper examines the impact of racial discrimination in hiring on employment, wage, and wealth disparities between black and white workers. Using a labor search-and-matching model with racially prejudiced and non-prejudiced firms, we show that labor market frictions sustain discriminatory practices as an equilibrium outcome. These practices account for 44% to 52% of the average wage gap and 16% of the median wealth gap. Discriminatory hiring also amplifies unemployment and wage volatility for black workers, increasing their labor market risks over business cycles. Eliminating prejudiced firms reduces these disparities and improves black workers' welfare, though it slightly decreases overall economic welfare.

Date: 2024-11, Revised 2024-12
New Economics Papers: this item is included in nep-ure
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