Abstract. This paper aims at explaining two stylized facts of the Lost Decade in Japan: rising wage inequalities and increasing firm-level productivity differentials. We build a model where firms can choose between efficiency wages with endogenous effort and competitive wages, and show that it can replicate those facts. Using Japanese microeconomic data, we find support for the existence of efficiency wages in one group of firms and competitive wages in the other group. Based on those results, a simulation shows that the share of firms using efficiency wages has declined, within sectors, during the Lost Decade, as predicted by the model. 1
Properly assessing labour market segmentation and its outcomes are essential for the debate of the p...
This study estimates two types of Phillips curves––the price Phillips curve and nominal wage Phillip...
This paper looks at several measures of competitiveness for the Japanese manufacturing sector relati...
Two stylized facts characterized Japan during the so-called Lost Decade (1992-2005): rising wage ine...
Over the past decade, productivity-adjusted wages have grown at a slower pace in Japan than in other...
This paper builds and calibrate a model of competitive search that can reproduce a set of stylized f...
This paper investigates the long-run changes in the wage rates of Japanese manufacturing firms betwe...
We investigate the reasons why real wages deviate from marginal labor productivity. Using a panel da...
Abstract: This paper looks at several measures of competitiveness for the Japanese manufacturing sec...
While there have been many changes recently in the compensation and employment practices of large fi...
This paper builds and calibrate a model of competitive search that can reproduce a set of stylized f...
We take a fresh analytical look at the developments in the Japanese labour market over the last two ...
This paper builds and calibrate a model of competitive search that can reproduce a set of stylized f...
This paper empirically analyzes whether a hypothesis from Aukrust (1977) applies to two phenomena in...
In this paper we investigate the long-term drivers of the share of output accruing to labour in Japa...
Properly assessing labour market segmentation and its outcomes are essential for the debate of the p...
This study estimates two types of Phillips curves––the price Phillips curve and nominal wage Phillip...
This paper looks at several measures of competitiveness for the Japanese manufacturing sector relati...
Two stylized facts characterized Japan during the so-called Lost Decade (1992-2005): rising wage ine...
Over the past decade, productivity-adjusted wages have grown at a slower pace in Japan than in other...
This paper builds and calibrate a model of competitive search that can reproduce a set of stylized f...
This paper investigates the long-run changes in the wage rates of Japanese manufacturing firms betwe...
We investigate the reasons why real wages deviate from marginal labor productivity. Using a panel da...
Abstract: This paper looks at several measures of competitiveness for the Japanese manufacturing sec...
While there have been many changes recently in the compensation and employment practices of large fi...
This paper builds and calibrate a model of competitive search that can reproduce a set of stylized f...
We take a fresh analytical look at the developments in the Japanese labour market over the last two ...
This paper builds and calibrate a model of competitive search that can reproduce a set of stylized f...
This paper empirically analyzes whether a hypothesis from Aukrust (1977) applies to two phenomena in...
In this paper we investigate the long-term drivers of the share of output accruing to labour in Japa...
Properly assessing labour market segmentation and its outcomes are essential for the debate of the p...
This study estimates two types of Phillips curves––the price Phillips curve and nominal wage Phillip...
This paper looks at several measures of competitiveness for the Japanese manufacturing sector relati...