Can a Task-Based Approach Explain the Recent Changes in the German Wage Structure?

Summary This paper investigates the changes in the German wage structure for full-time working males from 1999 to 2006. Our analysis builds on the task-based approach introduced by Autor et al. (2003), as implemented by Spitz-Oener (2006) for Germany, and also accounts for job complexity. We perform a Blinder-Oaxaca type decomposition of the changes in the entire wage distribution between 1999 and 2006 into the separate effects of personal characteristics and task assignments. In line with the literature, we find a noticeable increase of wage inequality between 1999 and 2006. The decomposition results show that the changes in personal characteristics explain some of the increase in wage inequality whereas the changes in task assignments strongly work towards reducing wage inequality. The coefficient effect for personal characteristics works towards an increase in wage inequality at the top of the wage distribution. The coefficient effect for the task assignments on the contrary shows an inverted U-shaped pattern. We conclude that altogether the task-based approach can not explain the recent increase of wage inequality in Germany.

[1]  K. Kohn Rising Wage Dispersion, After All! The German Wage Structure at the Turn of the Century , 2006, SSRN Electronic Journal.

[2]  Francine D. Blau,et al.  Handbook of Labor Economics , 1999 .

[3]  David H. Autor,et al.  Changes in the Wage Structure and Earnings Inequality , 1999 .

[4]  G. V. D. Vegt,et al.  Team Members’ Affective Responses to Patterns of Intragroup Interdependence and Job Complexity , 2000 .

[5]  J. Dinardo,et al.  Labor Market Institutions and the Distribution of Wages, 1973-1992: A Semiparametric Approach , 1996 .

[6]  A. Manning We Can Work it Out: The Impact of Technological Change on the Demand for Low-Skill Workers , 2004 .

[7]  M. Sturman,et al.  The impact of job complexity and performance measurement on the temporal consistency, stability, and test-retest reliability of employee job performance ratings. , 2005, The Journal of applied psychology.

[8]  Paul Sicilian,et al.  Minimum Wages, On-the-Job Training, and Wage Growth , 1999 .

[9]  Tuomas Pekkarinen,et al.  Gender Differences in Job Assignment and Promotion on a Complexity Ladder of Jobs , 2004, SSRN Electronic Journal.

[10]  Bernd Fitzenberger,et al.  The erosion of union membership in Germany: determinants, densities, decompositions , 2006, SSRN Electronic Journal.

[11]  R. Fairlie An Extension of the Blinder-Oaxaca Decomposition Technique to Logit and Probit Models , 2006, SSRN Electronic Journal.

[12]  Yitzhak Fried,et al.  The joint effects of noise, job complexity, and gender on employee sickness absence: An exploratory study across 21 organizations — the CORDIS study , 2002 .

[13]  R. Fairlie The Absence of the African‐American Owned Business: An Analysis of the Dynamics of Self‐Employment , 1999, Journal of Labor Economics.

[14]  J. Mata,et al.  Counterfactual decomposition of changes in wage distributions using quantile regression , 2005 .

[15]  A. Heinze Beyond the Mean Gender Wage Gap: Decomposition of Differences in Wage Distributions Using Quantile Regression , 2010 .

[16]  J. Hartog,et al.  Job Complexity and Wages , 1993 .

[17]  Bernd Fitzenberger Nach der Reform ist vor der Reform? Eine arbeitsökonomische Analyse ausgewählter Aspekte der Hartz-Reformen , 2008 .

[18]  Alexandra Spitz-Oener Technical Change, Job Tasks, and Rising Educational Demands: Looking outside the Wage Structure , 2006, Journal of Labor Economics.

[19]  D. Acemoglu Why Do New Technologies Complement Skills? Directed Technical Change and Wage Inequality , 1998 .

[20]  Alexandra Spitz-Oener,et al.  Explaining Women's Success: Technological Change and the Skill Content of Women's Work , 2007, The Review of Economics and Statistics.

[21]  Johannes Ludsteck,et al.  Revisiting the German Wage Structure , 2007, SSRN Electronic Journal.

[22]  Bernd Fitzenberger,et al.  Gender Wage Differences in West Germany: A Cohort Analysis , 2000 .

[23]  DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMICS , 2003 .

[24]  A. Manning,et al.  Lousy and Lovely Jobs: The Rising Polarization of Work in Britain , 2007, The Review of Economics and Statistics.

[25]  Lawrence F. Katz,et al.  Trends in U.S. Wage Inequality: Re-Assessing the Revisionists , 2005 .

[26]  Bernd Fitzenberger Wages and Employment Across Skill Groups : An Analysis for West Germany , 1999 .

[27]  Bernd Fitzenberger,et al.  Skill Wage Premia, Employment, and Cohort Effects: Are Workers in Germany All of the Same Type? , 2006, SSRN Electronic Journal.

[28]  Rising Wage Inequality in Germany , 2006 .

[29]  Nicolaas J. Vriend,et al.  Young Mediterraneans in the Dutch Labour Market: A Comparative Analysis of Allocation and Earnings , 1990 .

[30]  S. Valentine A path analysis of gender, race, and job complexity as determinants of intention to look for work , 2001 .

[31]  Y. Ganzach,et al.  Within-occupation sources of variance in Incumbent Perception of Job Complexity , 2001 .

[32]  David H. Autor,et al.  Trends in U.S. Wage Inequality: Revising the Revisionists , 2008, The Review of Economics and Statistics.

[33]  David Autor,et al.  Inequality and Specialization: The Growth of Low-Skill Service Jobs in the United States , 2009, SSRN Electronic Journal.

[34]  David Autor,et al.  Nontechnical Summary Can a Task-based Approach Explain the Recent Changes in the German Wage Structure? – Long Version – , 2022 .