Lower Wage Rates for Less Hours? A Simultaneous Wage-Hours Model for Germany

Posted: 9 Nov 2003

See all articles by Elke Wolf

Elke Wolf

Center for European Economic Research (ZEW)

Date Written: January 2000

Abstract

In this paper the impact of working hours on the gross hourly wage rate of West German women is analyzed. We use a simultaneous wage-hours model which takes into account the participation decision. First, our estimates show that the hourly wage rate is strongly affected by the working hours. In order to avoid any assumptions about the functional form, we estimate linear spline functions. Second, we detect different wage-hours profiles for specific groups of individuals. Despite these differences, the wage reduction for jobs with less than 20 hours a week and for overtime hours turns out to be a robust result. However, the hourly wage rate of jobs with 20 to 38 hours does not differ significantly. Third, for West German women, the exogeneity assumption of working hours in the wage regression must be rejected if the wage-hours locus is assumed to be the same for all individuals. As a result of this the wage rate of full-time employees is overestimated in the standrad OLS estimation.

JEL Classification: J22, J24, J31

Suggested Citation

Wolf, Elke, Lower Wage Rates for Less Hours? A Simultaneous Wage-Hours Model for Germany (January 2000). Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=373362

Elke Wolf (Contact Author)

Center for European Economic Research (ZEW) ( email )

P.O. Box 10 34 43
L 7,1 D-68161 Mannheim
Germany

Do you have negative results from your research you’d like to share?

Paper statistics

Abstract Views
600
PlumX Metrics