Regional Wage Differentiation and Wage Bargaining Systems in the EU

Author (Corporate)
Series Title
Series Details No.43, 2008 (February 2008)
Publication Date 2008
Content Type

The theoretical literature has argued that a centralised wage bargaining system may result in low regional wage differentiation and high regional unemployment differentials. The empirical literature has found that centralized wage bargaining leads to lower wage inequality for different skills, industries and population groups, but has not investigated its impact on regional wage differentiation. Empirical evidence in this paper for EU regions for the period 1980-2000 suggests that countries with more coordinated wage bargaining systems have lower regional wage differentials, after controlling for regional productivity and unemployment differentials.

Source Link http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/cat/longres.cfm?sk=21653.0
Countries / Regions