Inter-industry wage differentials in Ireland
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Economic & Social Studies
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Gannon, Brenda; Nolan, Brian. 'Inter-industry wage differentials in Ireland'. - Economic & Social Review, Vol. 35, No. 2, Summer/Autumn, 2004, pp. 157?182, Dublin: Economic & Social Research Institute
Abstract
This paper investigates inter-industry wage differentials in Ireland, taking advantage of
access to a dataset that is uniquely suitable for this purpose, the 1996 Structure of Earnings Survey. This allows us to measure not simply overall differentials in the average wage across sectors, but also the extent to which these are associated with a range of employee, job, employer and sectoral characteristics. The results show that there are substantial differences in earnings across industrial sectors in Ireland, predominantly but not only reflecting differences in measured human capital of workers and attributes of their jobs. While unobserved individual and job characteristics may underpin the remaining differentials, efficiency wage or rent-sharing could also be playing a role. Including a range of firm and sectoral characteristics relevant to the latter does not markedly alter the scale of inter-industry differentials, but firm fixed effects seem important. The dispersion of wages across industries, controlling for observed employee, job and employer characteristics, is quite high in Ireland compared to other industrialised countries.
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Publisher: Economic & Social Studies
Type of material: Journal Article

