Inequality and labour-market performance. A survey beyond an elusive trade-off
Abstract
In this paper we assess the evolution of employment and wage
inequality in Europe and the US labour markets over the past two
decades. We find that the salient trends in wage structures are
more complicated than implied by the so-called “unified theory”.
Furthermore there is no clear cross-country correlation between
changes in wage and employment rates by skill categories. This
brings us to consider in detail other factors mentioned in the literature
as contributing to poor labour-market performance in Europe.
We find that strong unions, a factor often believed to bring about
wage compression and poor labour-market performance, are not
necessarily associated with the latter when bargaining is sufficiently
coordinated. We also find that successful welfare reforms
can bring about considerable improvements in performance without
much impact on inequality. Finally we point out that the role of
industrial structure and of the housing sector cannot be neglected
when explaining cross-country labour-market performance.