2014-10-08T11:11:07Z
2014-10-08T11:11:07Z
2012
2014-10-08T11:11:07Z
This paper aims at disentangling the role played by different theoretical explanations in accounting for the urban wage premium along the wage distribution. We analyze the wage dynamics of migrants from low-to-high-density areas in Italy, using quantile regression and individual panel data to control for the sorting of workers. The results show that skilled workers enjoy a higher wage premium when they migrate (wage level effect), in line with the agglomeration externalities explanation, while unskilled workers benefit more from a wage premium accruing over time (wage growth effect). Further, investigating the determinants of the wage growth effect in greater depth, we find that for unskilled workers the wage growth is mainly due to human capital accumulation over time, consistently with the “learning” hypothesis, while for skilled workers it is the “coordination” hypothesis that matters.
Documento de trabajo
Inglés
Geografia de la població; Competències professionals; Salaris; Distribució (Teoria econòmica); Capital social (Sociologia); Population geography; Vocational qualifications; Wages; Distribution (Economic theory); Social capital (Sociology)
Universitat de Barcelona. Institut de Recerca en Economia Aplicada Regional i Pública
Reproducció del document publicat a: http://www.ub.edu/irea/working_papers/2012/201203.pdf
IREA – Working Papers, 2012, IR12/03
AQR – Working Papers, 2012, AQR12/02
[WP E-AQR12/02]
[WP E-IR12/03]
cc-by-nc-nd, (c) Matano et al., 2012
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/