This paper tests the `morale' theory of downward nominal wage rigidity. This theory relies on workers disliking nominal pay cuts: cuts should make workers less happy. We investigate this using panel data on individual employees' pay and satisfaction. We confirm that nominal cuts do make workers less happy than if their pay had not fallen. But we find no difference in the effect on happiness of cuts and pay freezes. This represents important information about the nature of wage rigidity in practice and the applicability of the morale theory. The morale theory may be able to explain generalised downward wage rigidity, but apparently fails to explain downward nominal rigidity.wage rigidity, satisfaction
Drawing on the extensive economics literature on wage rigidity, we examine bonus rigidity and, in pa...
A survey of 184 firms was conducted to investigate the reasons for wage rigidity. The strongest supp...
Recent studies found evidence for nominal wage rigidity during periods of relatively high nominal GD...
This paper tests the ‘morale’ theory of downward nominal wage rigidity. This theory relies on worke...
This paper tests the ‘morale’ theory of downward nominal wage rigidity. This theory relies on worker...
This paper tests the morale theory of nominal wage rigidity, according to which firms resist making ...
Theories of wage rigidity often rely on a positive relationship between pay changes and utility, ari...
Theories of wage rigidity often rely on a positive relationship between pay changes and utility, ari...
Using the Panel Study of Income Dynamics, we find that true wage changes have many fewer nominal cut...
Theories of wage rigidity often rely on a positive relationship between pay changes and utility, ari...
This paper formalizes and assesses empirically the implications of widely observed evidence for down...
Employment contracts are often incomplete, leaving many responsibilities subject to workers’ discret...
Employment contracts are often incomplete, leaving many responsibilitiessubject to workers’ discreti...
This paper seeks to contribute to the literature on downward nominal wage rigidity (DNWR) along two ...
It has been well established that the wages of individual workers react little, especially downwards...
Drawing on the extensive economics literature on wage rigidity, we examine bonus rigidity and, in pa...
A survey of 184 firms was conducted to investigate the reasons for wage rigidity. The strongest supp...
Recent studies found evidence for nominal wage rigidity during periods of relatively high nominal GD...
This paper tests the ‘morale’ theory of downward nominal wage rigidity. This theory relies on worke...
This paper tests the ‘morale’ theory of downward nominal wage rigidity. This theory relies on worker...
This paper tests the morale theory of nominal wage rigidity, according to which firms resist making ...
Theories of wage rigidity often rely on a positive relationship between pay changes and utility, ari...
Theories of wage rigidity often rely on a positive relationship between pay changes and utility, ari...
Using the Panel Study of Income Dynamics, we find that true wage changes have many fewer nominal cut...
Theories of wage rigidity often rely on a positive relationship between pay changes and utility, ari...
This paper formalizes and assesses empirically the implications of widely observed evidence for down...
Employment contracts are often incomplete, leaving many responsibilities subject to workers’ discret...
Employment contracts are often incomplete, leaving many responsibilitiessubject to workers’ discreti...
This paper seeks to contribute to the literature on downward nominal wage rigidity (DNWR) along two ...
It has been well established that the wages of individual workers react little, especially downwards...
Drawing on the extensive economics literature on wage rigidity, we examine bonus rigidity and, in pa...
A survey of 184 firms was conducted to investigate the reasons for wage rigidity. The strongest supp...
Recent studies found evidence for nominal wage rigidity during periods of relatively high nominal GD...