Is There a Wage Payoff to Innovative Work Practices?

Levy Economics Institute Working Paper No. 288

18 Pages Posted: 17 Feb 2000

See all articles by Michael Handel

Michael Handel

Northeastern University--Department of Sociology

Maury Gittleman

Bureau of Labor Statistics

Date Written: November 1999

Abstract

During the 1980s, wage inequality increased dramatically and the American economy lost many high wage, low- to medium-skill jobs, which had provided middle class incomes to less skilled workers. Increasingly, less skilled workers seemed restricted to low wage jobs lacking union or other institutional protections. Although "good" jobs for less skilled workers are unlikely to return in their previous form, a number of sociologists, economists, and industrial relations scholars have suggested that a new paradigm of work, often called "high performance," is emerging, which offers such workers more skilled jobs and higher wages. Using a unique national data set we find little evidence that high performance work systems are associated with higher wages.

JEL Classification: J31

Suggested Citation

Handel, Michael J. and Gittleman, Maury, Is There a Wage Payoff to Innovative Work Practices? (November 1999). Levy Economics Institute Working Paper No. 288, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=199972 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.199972

Michael J. Handel (Contact Author)

Northeastern University--Department of Sociology ( email )

500 Holmes Hall
Boston, MA 02115

Maury Gittleman

Bureau of Labor Statistics ( email )

2 Massachusetts Avenue, NE
Room 4130
Washington, DC 20212
United States

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