Workplace Heterogeneity and the Rise of West German Wage Inequality

82 Pages Posted: 16 Feb 2013

See all articles by David Card

David Card

University of California, Berkeley - Department of Economics; Institute for the Study of Labor (IZA); National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER)

Jörg Heining

Government of the Federal Republic of Germany - Institute for Employment Research (IAB)

Patrick Kline

University of California, Berkeley - Department of Economics

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Abstract

We study the role of establishment-specific wage premiums in generating recent increases in West German wage inequality. Models with additive fixed effects for workers and establishments are fit in four sub-intervals spanning the period from 1985 to 2009. We show that these models provide a good approximation to the wage structure and can explain nearly all of the dramatic rise in West German wage inequality.Our estimates suggest that the increasing dispersion of West German wages has arisen from a combination of rising heterogeneity between workers, rising dispersion in the wage premiums at different establishments, and increasing assortativeness in the assignment of workers to plants. In contrast, the idiosyncratic job-match component of wage variation is small and stable over time. Decomposing changes in mean wages between different education groups, occupations, and industries, we find that increasing plant-level heterogeneity and rising assortativeness in the assignment of workers to establishments explain a large share of the rise in inequality along all three dimensions.

Keywords: wage inequality, assortative matching

JEL Classification: J00, J31, J40

Suggested Citation

Card, David E. and Heining, Jörg and Kline, Patrick, Workplace Heterogeneity and the Rise of West German Wage Inequality. IZA Discussion Paper No. 7200, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=2219125 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.2219125

David E. Card (Contact Author)

University of California, Berkeley - Department of Economics ( email )

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Institute for the Study of Labor (IZA)

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National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER)

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Jörg Heining

Government of the Federal Republic of Germany - Institute for Employment Research (IAB)

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Patrick Kline

University of California, Berkeley - Department of Economics ( email )

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