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Labor Market Rigidity, Social Policies and the Labor Share: Empirical Evidence Before and After the Big Crisis

Resource type
Author/contributor
Title
Labor Market Rigidity, Social Policies and the Labor Share: Empirical Evidence Before and After the Big Crisis
Abstract
This paper provides evidence of the impact of three important and general policies shaping the degree of labor market rigidity on the labor share: welfare expenditures, government ex- penditures on active labor market programs, and passive labor market measures. It analyses the impact of regulation, such as the intensity of employment protection, and evaluates whether trade unions and minimum wage institutions play a role in the relationship between all measures and the labor share. The labor income share has experienced a declining trend since the mid- 1970s in most advanced economies, and the existing literature found little if no correlation of this decline to general labor market characteristics. However, the present paper finds that some in- stitutions are correlated to the downward trend, depending on the welfare system adopted, and that welfare and employment protection counteract the decline. Moreover, many countries saw an upsurge in their labor share after the burst of the financial crisis. Evidence of whether the effect of the policies weakened or reinforced the labor share after 2007 is reported.
Publication
Economic Systems
Volume
41
Issue
4
Pages
492-512
Date
2017
Language
English
ISSN
09393625
Short Title
Labor Market Rigidity, Social Policies and the Labor Share
Accessed
7/15/18, 1:10 AM
Library Catalog
Crossref
Citation
Parisi, M. L. (2017). Labor Market Rigidity, Social Policies and the Labor Share: Empirical Evidence Before and After the Big Crisis. Economic Systems, 41(4), 492–512. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ecosys.2017.08.003