International Trade and Labour Income Risk in the U.S.

This article studies empirically the links between international trade and labour income risk faced by manufacturing sector workers in the U.S. We use longitudinal data on workers to estimate time-varying individual income risk at the industry level. We then combine our estimates of persistent labour income risk with measures of exposure to international trade to analyse the relationship between trade and labour income risk. We also study risk estimates from various subsamples of workers, such as those who switched to a different manufacturing industry (or out of the manufacturing sector altogether). Finally, we use these estimates to conduct a welfare analysis evaluating the benefits or costs of trade through the income risk channel. We find import penetration to have a statistically significant association with labour income risk in the U.S. Our welfare calculations suggest that these effects are economically significant. Copyright 2014, Oxford University Press.

[1]  Tom Krebs,et al.  Consumption-Based Asset Pricing with Incomplete Markets , 2000 .

[2]  A. Levchenko,et al.  Trade Openness and Volatility , 2006, The Review of Economics and Statistics.

[3]  Income Variance Dynamics and Heterogeneity , 2001 .

[4]  K. Ramaswamy,et al.  Trade Reforms, Labor Regulations, and Labor-Demand Elasticities: Empirical Evidence from India , 2003, The Review of Economics and Statistics.

[5]  William F. Maloney,et al.  Trade Policy, Income Risk, and Welfare , 2005 .

[6]  Matthew J. Slaughter,et al.  International Trade and American Wages in the 1980s: Giant Sucking Sound or Small Hiccup? , 1993 .

[7]  Joseph E. Stiglitz,et al.  Pareto Inferior Trade , 1984 .

[8]  Marc J. Melitz The Impact of Trade on Intra-Industry Reallocations and Aggregate Industry Productivity , 2003 .

[9]  T. Krebs Testable implications of consumption-based asset pricing models with incomplete markets☆ , 2004 .

[10]  M. Slaughter,et al.  International Trade and Labor-Demand Elasticities , 1997 .

[11]  Robert C. Feenstra,et al.  The Impact of Outsourcing and High-Technology Capital on Wages: Estimates For the United States, 1979–1990 , 1999 .

[12]  P. Goldberg,et al.  Trade, Wages and the Political Economy of Trade Protection: Evidence from the Colombian Trade Reforms , 2003 .

[13]  Mine Zeynep Senses The Effects of Outsourcing on the Elasticity of Labor Demand , 2004 .

[14]  G. Gancia,et al.  Openness, Government Size and the Terms of Trade , 2008 .

[15]  D. Davis,et al.  Good Jobs, Bad Jobs, and Trade Liberalization , 2007 .

[16]  Dani Rodrik,et al.  Why do More Open Economies Have Bigger Governments? , 1996, Journal of Political Economy.

[17]  Lifecycle Dynamics of Income Uncertainty and Consumption , 2008 .

[18]  J. Parker,et al.  Consumption Over the Life Cycle , 1999 .

[19]  Edward E. Leamer,et al.  Wage Inequality from International Competition and Technological Change: Theory and Country Experience , 1996 .

[20]  David K. Levine,et al.  Does Market Incompleteness Matter , 2002 .

[21]  C. Carroll,et al.  The Nature of Precautionary Wealth , 1995 .

[22]  Gordon H. Hanson,et al.  Offshoring and Volatility: Evidence from Mexico's Maquiladora Industry , 2009 .

[23]  Sajjid Z. Chinoy,et al.  Trade liberalization and labor demand elasticities: evidence from Turkey , 2001 .

[24]  B. Hirsch,et al.  Union Membership and Coverage Database from the Current Population Survey: Note , 2002 .

[25]  Dmytro Hryshko,et al.  Labor income profiles are not heterogeneous: Evidence from income growth rates , 2012 .