We theoretically and empirically examine how firms’ choices of wage-setting protocols respond to labor market conditions. We develop a simple model in which workers may be able to send multiple job applications and firms choose between posting wages and Nash bargaining. Posting a wage allows the firm to commit to lower wages than would be negotiated ex post, but eliminates the ability to respond to a competing offer, should the worker have one. We show that higher productivity lowers both the application-vacancy ratio and the fraction of firms posting a wage. On the other hand, an increase in the number of applications per worker raises the application-vacancy ratio while lowering the fraction of firms posting a wage. As a result, the equilibrium fraction of firms posting a wage may be positively or negatively correlated with the application-vacancy ratio, depending on the source of shocks. The model also implies that an increase in the number of applications per worker may lead to a decrease in the number of posting firms rather than a change in the wages posted by those firms. Empirically, we demonstrate that the model’s predictions are confirmed in a novel dataset from an online job board.
Date
16.1.2024
, 4.00 until 5.30 p.m.
Speaker
Brenda Samaniego de la Parra (University of California, Santa Cruz)
(joint work with Stanislav Rabinovich and Ronald Wolthoff).
Venue
The seminar will be held via Zoom.
Registration
Researchers who would like to participate, please send an email to macrolabor.seminar@gmail.com.