Staggered wages, unanticipated shocks and firms’ adjustments

Francesco G. Caloia, Jante Parlevliet, Mauro Mastrogiacomo*

*Corresponding author for this work

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Abstract

This paper empirically investigates the employment and wage effects of contract staggering, i.e., the asynchronous and infrequent way in which wages adjust to changes in the economic environment. Using an identification strategy based on exogenous start dates of collective agreements around the Great Recession, we estimate the effect of increases in base wages on firms’ labor cost adjustments. Our analysis is based on a large employers-employees dataset merged to collective agreements in the Netherlands, a country in which collective bargaining is dominant and contract staggering is relatively pervasive. The main result is that staggered wage setting has no real effect on employment. We find significant employment losses only in sectors covered by contracts with much longer durations than those normally assumed in macroeconomic models featuring staggered wages. Instead, we show that firms adjust labor costs by curbing other pay components such as bonuses and benefits and incidental pay. The overall result supports the idea that wage rigidities are not the main source of employment fluctuations.

Original languageEnglish
Article number103521
Pages (from-to)1-20
Number of pages20
JournalJournal of Macroeconomics
Volume76
Early online date12 Mar 2023
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Jun 2023

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2023

Keywords

  • Collective labor agreements
  • Staggered wages
  • Wage rigidity

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