Seminar
Selection into Trade and Wage Inequality
Economics
Speaker: | Thomas Sampson, LSE |
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Date: | Friday 15 June 2012 |
Time: | 16.15 |
Location: | Matrix Lecture Theatre, Building One |
Further details
This paper analyzes the impact of trade integration on wage inequality when there is heterogeneity across both workers and firms. By incorporating labor assignment into the heterogeneous firms literature I develop a model in which positive assortative matching between worker skill and firm technology explains the employer size-wage premium and the exporter wage premium. Under trade, fixed export costs cause the selection of high productivity, high skill firms into exporting and an upwards shift in the firm technology distribution. Consequently, the demand for skill and wage inequality increase in all countries, both on aggregate and within the export sector. This result holds both when firms’ technologies are determined by a random draw and when technology is endogenous to firm level R&D. With endogenous
technology, the increased demand for skill caused by trade liberalization results from technology upgrading by new exporters.