This paper presents new evidence on international trade and worker outcomes. It examines a big world event that produced an unprecedentedly large shock to the UK exchange rate. In the 24 hours in June 2016 during which the UK electorate unexpectedly voted to leave the European Union, the value of sterling plummeted. It recorded the biggest depreciation that has occurred in any of the world’s four major currencies since the collapse of Bretton Woods. Exploiting this variation, the paper studies the impact of trade on wages and worker training. Wages and training fell for workers employed in sectors where the intermediate import price rose by more as a consequence of the sterling depreciation. Calibrating the estimated wage elasticity with re...
This paper documents evidence of differential speed of labour demand adjustment among exporters, for...
As in many European countries, labour productivity in the UK has been stagnant since the start of th...
This paper analyzes the links between labour market institutions and skill premiums in the UK, contr...
This paper studies consequences of the very large exchange rate depreciation occurring in June 2016 ...
We exploit the recent surge in Chinese export growth to study the effects of a trade shock on worker...
How do the interactions between non-trading firms and labour market frictions impact the domestic an...
The share of low-income countries in global exports nearly tripled between 1990 and 2015, driven lar...
We consider more carefully the evidence from traded prices (as proxied by unit values) concerning th...
Experiences during the Great Recession support the view that the UK labor market is relatively flexi...
A depreciation is probably good news for low-skilled workers, write Boris Kaiser and Michael Siegent...
The cause(s) of increased wage inequality in developed nations in recent decades is a contentious is...
The last four decades have been characterised by drastic changes in the distribution of income betwe...
This article presents an econometric analysis of the wage share in seven emerging economies. We focu...
This thesis focuses on three issues. First, it investigates the impact of fluctuations in internatio...
The share of wages in national income has declined across the developed world over the last thirty y...
This paper documents evidence of differential speed of labour demand adjustment among exporters, for...
As in many European countries, labour productivity in the UK has been stagnant since the start of th...
This paper analyzes the links between labour market institutions and skill premiums in the UK, contr...
This paper studies consequences of the very large exchange rate depreciation occurring in June 2016 ...
We exploit the recent surge in Chinese export growth to study the effects of a trade shock on worker...
How do the interactions between non-trading firms and labour market frictions impact the domestic an...
The share of low-income countries in global exports nearly tripled between 1990 and 2015, driven lar...
We consider more carefully the evidence from traded prices (as proxied by unit values) concerning th...
Experiences during the Great Recession support the view that the UK labor market is relatively flexi...
A depreciation is probably good news for low-skilled workers, write Boris Kaiser and Michael Siegent...
The cause(s) of increased wage inequality in developed nations in recent decades is a contentious is...
The last four decades have been characterised by drastic changes in the distribution of income betwe...
This article presents an econometric analysis of the wage share in seven emerging economies. We focu...
This thesis focuses on three issues. First, it investigates the impact of fluctuations in internatio...
The share of wages in national income has declined across the developed world over the last thirty y...
This paper documents evidence of differential speed of labour demand adjustment among exporters, for...
As in many European countries, labour productivity in the UK has been stagnant since the start of th...
This paper analyzes the links between labour market institutions and skill premiums in the UK, contr...