Following Phillip's original work on the UK, applied research on unemployment and wages has been dominated by the analysis of highly aggregated time-series data sets. However, it has proved difficult with such methods to uncover statistically reliable models. This paper adopts a different approach. It uses microeconomic data on 175,000 British workers from 1973-1990 to provide evidence for the existence of a negatively sloped relationship linking the level of pay to the local rate of unemployment. This 'wage curve' is found to have an elasticity of approximately -0.1. Contrary to the Phillips Curve, no autoregression is found in wages. The paper casts doubt on standard ideas in macroeconomics, regional economics and labour economics.
This paper examines the role of regional unemployment in wage determination. Recent empirical studie...
This paper was written while visiting the ESRC macroeconomic Modelling Bureau at the University of W...
In the last decade we have seen extensive international research on the extent to which wages of ind...
Following Phillips's original work on the UK, applied research on unemployment and wages has been do...
This paper documents a statistical regulatity or law. It shows that there exists a downward-sloping ...
This paper provides evidence for the existence of a wage curve -- a micro-econometric association be...
This paper is concerned with the relationship between wages and unemployment. Using UK regions and i...
This paper, which follows in an LSE tradition begun by Phillips and Sargan, examines the rote of une...
Panel data from the United Kingdom are used to estimate a wage curve that allows simultaneously for ...
This paper shows that wage-unemployment elasticities derived from estimated wage curves and Phillips...
The paper provides international evidence for the existence of a negatively sloped locus linking the...
This paper investigates the determinants of regional wages in Britain using annual data from the New...
Based on US state-level data for the period 1982-2016, two reduced-form versions of New Keynesian wa...
This paper is concerned with the relationship between wages and unemployment. Using UK regions and i...
In this paper, we test the hypothesis of a wage curve against a Phillips curve for Spain, within a d...
This paper examines the role of regional unemployment in wage determination. Recent empirical studie...
This paper was written while visiting the ESRC macroeconomic Modelling Bureau at the University of W...
In the last decade we have seen extensive international research on the extent to which wages of ind...
Following Phillips's original work on the UK, applied research on unemployment and wages has been do...
This paper documents a statistical regulatity or law. It shows that there exists a downward-sloping ...
This paper provides evidence for the existence of a wage curve -- a micro-econometric association be...
This paper is concerned with the relationship between wages and unemployment. Using UK regions and i...
This paper, which follows in an LSE tradition begun by Phillips and Sargan, examines the rote of une...
Panel data from the United Kingdom are used to estimate a wage curve that allows simultaneously for ...
This paper shows that wage-unemployment elasticities derived from estimated wage curves and Phillips...
The paper provides international evidence for the existence of a negatively sloped locus linking the...
This paper investigates the determinants of regional wages in Britain using annual data from the New...
Based on US state-level data for the period 1982-2016, two reduced-form versions of New Keynesian wa...
This paper is concerned with the relationship between wages and unemployment. Using UK regions and i...
In this paper, we test the hypothesis of a wage curve against a Phillips curve for Spain, within a d...
This paper examines the role of regional unemployment in wage determination. Recent empirical studie...
This paper was written while visiting the ESRC macroeconomic Modelling Bureau at the University of W...
In the last decade we have seen extensive international research on the extent to which wages of ind...