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Inequality and the Disappearing Large Firm Wage Premium

New York, USA 23 June 2017 – 25 June 2017

Nicholas Bloom (Stanford University, NBER, and SIEPR); Fatih Guvenen (University of Minnesota, FRB of Minneapolis, NBER)); Benjamin S. Smith (UCLA); Jae Song (Social Security Administration); Till von Wachter (UCLA and NBER)

A9 Firms and Inequality
Chair: Claudine Gartenberg (New York University)
Room JG 107

Abstract

Large firms have paid a significantly higher wage for more than a century, but over the last thirty years this large firm premium has started to disappear. We show about half of this is due to changes in industry composition - firms in the shrinking manufacturing sector pay an earnings premium while those in the growing services sector do not. The other half is because large firms have stopped paying a salary premium in the Abowd et al. (1999) sense, particularly for lower paid and lower skilled workers. Thus, one reason for increasing overall inequality may be the disappearance of well-paid jobs for lower skilled workers in large firms.