Inter-Industry Wage Differentials in EU Countries: What Do Cross-Country Time Varying Data Add to the Picture?

36 Pages Posted: 27 Apr 2010

See all articles by Ana Lamo

Ana Lamo

European Central Bank (ECB)

Philip Du Caju

National Bank of Belgium

Daphne Nicolitsas

Bank of Greece

Steven Poelhekke

University of Auckland

Gábor Kátay

Magyar Nemzeti Bank

Date Written: April 12, 2010

Abstract

This paper documents the existence and main patterns of inter-industry wage differentials across a large number of industries for 8 EU countries (Belgium, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Ireland, Italy, Netherlands, and Spain) at two points in time (in general 1995 and 2002) and explores possible explanations for these patterns. The analysis uses the European Structure of Earnings Survey (SES), an internationally harmonised matched employer-employee dataset, to estimate inter-industry wage differentials conditional on a rich set of employee, employer and job characteristics. After investigating the possibility that unobservable employee characteristics lie behind the conditional wage differentials, a hypothesis which cannot be accepted, the paper investigates the role of institutional, industry structure and industry performance characteristics in explaining inter-industry wage differentials. The results suggest that inter-industry wage differentials are consistent with rent sharing mechanisms and that rent sharing is more likely in industries with firm-level collective agreements and with higher collective agreement coverage.

Keywords: inter-industry wage differentials, rent sharing, unobserved ability

JEL Classification: J31, J41, J51

Suggested Citation

Lamo, Ana and Du Caju, Philip and Nicolitsas, Daphne and Poelhekke, Steven and Kátay, Gábor, Inter-Industry Wage Differentials in EU Countries: What Do Cross-Country Time Varying Data Add to the Picture? (April 12, 2010). ECB Working Paper No. 1182, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=1588686 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.1588686

Ana Lamo (Contact Author)

European Central Bank (ECB) ( email )

Sonnemannstrasse 22
Frankfurt am Main, 60314
Germany

Philip Du Caju

National Bank of Belgium ( email )

Research Department
Boulevard de Berlaimont 14
B-1000 Brussels, 1000
Belgium

Daphne Nicolitsas

Bank of Greece ( email )

21 E. Venizelos Avenue
GR 102 50 Athens
Greece

Steven Poelhekke

University of Auckland ( email )

Auckland
New Zealand

HOME PAGE: http://https://sites.google.com/site/stevenpoelhekke/

Gábor Kátay

Magyar Nemzeti Bank ( email )

H-1850 Budapest
Hungary

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