Abstract
We use a rich new body of data on the experiences of unemployed jobseekers to determine the sources of wage dispersion and to create a search model consistent with the acceptance decisions the jobseekers made. Heterogeneity in non-wage job values or amenities among jobseekers and jobs is a central feature of our model. From the data and the model, we identify the distributions of four key variables: oered wages, offered non-wage job values, the value of the jobseeker's non-work alternative, and the jobseeker's personal productivity. Wefind that, conditional on personal productivity, the standard deviation of oered log-wages is moderate, at 0.24, whereas the dispersion of the non-wage component of oered job values is substantially larger, at 0.34. The resulting dispersion of oered job values is 0.38. We also find high dispersion of personal productivity, at 0.43.
Full Citation
Hall, Robert. “Wage Dispersion and Search Behavior: The Importance of Non-Wage Job Values.”
Journal of Political Economy
vol. 126,
(August 01, 2018): 1594-1637.