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Relative productivity and search unemployment in an open economy

Research output: Working paper

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Relative productivity and search unemployment in an open economy. / Bertinelli, Luisito; Cardi, Olivier; Restout, Romain.
Lancaster: Lancaster University, Department of Economics, 2018. (Economics Working Paper Series).

Research output: Working paper

Harvard

Bertinelli, L, Cardi, O & Restout, R 2018 'Relative productivity and search unemployment in an open economy' Economics Working Paper Series, Lancaster University, Department of Economics, Lancaster.

APA

Bertinelli, L., Cardi, O., & Restout, R. (2018). Relative productivity and search unemployment in an open economy. (Economics Working Paper Series). Lancaster University, Department of Economics.

Vancouver

Bertinelli L, Cardi O, Restout R. Relative productivity and search unemployment in an open economy. Lancaster: Lancaster University, Department of Economics. 2018 Sept. (Economics Working Paper Series).

Author

Bertinelli, Luisito ; Cardi, Olivier ; Restout, Romain. / Relative productivity and search unemployment in an open economy. Lancaster : Lancaster University, Department of Economics, 2018. (Economics Working Paper Series).

Bibtex

@techreport{3e2fdedbf7ad40cb907e80350355df9c,
title = "Relative productivity and search unemployment in an open economy",
abstract = "This paper develops a tractable version of a two-sector open economy model with search frictions to disentangle the implications of workers' mobility costs and labor market institutions following higher relative productivity of tradables. Using a panel of eighteen OECD countries, our estimates show that higher productivity in tradables relative to non tradables causes a decline in non traded relative to traded wages. The fall in the relative wage reveals the presence of labor mobility costs which mitigate the appreciation in the relative price of non tradables and lower the relative unemployment rate of tradables following higher relative productivity of tradables. Whilst our evidence suggests that such responses have increased over time as the result of decreasing labor mobility costs, our estimates also reveal that the magnitude of the effects vary considerably across countries. Using a set of indicators capturing the heterogeneity of labor market frictions across economies, we find that both the relative wage and the relative unemployment rate of tradables decline significantly more and the relative price appreciates less in countries where labor market regulation is more pronounced. We show that these empirical findings can be rationalized in a two-sector open economy model with search in the labor market as long as we allow for an endogenous sectoral labor force participation decision. When we calibrate the model to country-specific data, numerical results reveal that the responses of the relative wage, the relative price, and to a lesser extent the relative unemployment rate display a wide dispersion acrosscountries. Importantly, all variables display a significant negative relationship with labor market regulation.",
keywords = "Relative productivity of tradables, Search theory, Labor market institutions, Labor mobility, Sectoral price and wage differences, Sectoral unemployment, Current account",
author = "Luisito Bertinelli and Olivier Cardi and Romain Restout",
year = "2018",
month = sep,
language = "English",
series = "Economics Working Paper Series",
publisher = "Lancaster University, Department of Economics",
type = "WorkingPaper",
institution = "Lancaster University, Department of Economics",

}

RIS

TY - UNPB

T1 - Relative productivity and search unemployment in an open economy

AU - Bertinelli, Luisito

AU - Cardi, Olivier

AU - Restout, Romain

PY - 2018/9

Y1 - 2018/9

N2 - This paper develops a tractable version of a two-sector open economy model with search frictions to disentangle the implications of workers' mobility costs and labor market institutions following higher relative productivity of tradables. Using a panel of eighteen OECD countries, our estimates show that higher productivity in tradables relative to non tradables causes a decline in non traded relative to traded wages. The fall in the relative wage reveals the presence of labor mobility costs which mitigate the appreciation in the relative price of non tradables and lower the relative unemployment rate of tradables following higher relative productivity of tradables. Whilst our evidence suggests that such responses have increased over time as the result of decreasing labor mobility costs, our estimates also reveal that the magnitude of the effects vary considerably across countries. Using a set of indicators capturing the heterogeneity of labor market frictions across economies, we find that both the relative wage and the relative unemployment rate of tradables decline significantly more and the relative price appreciates less in countries where labor market regulation is more pronounced. We show that these empirical findings can be rationalized in a two-sector open economy model with search in the labor market as long as we allow for an endogenous sectoral labor force participation decision. When we calibrate the model to country-specific data, numerical results reveal that the responses of the relative wage, the relative price, and to a lesser extent the relative unemployment rate display a wide dispersion acrosscountries. Importantly, all variables display a significant negative relationship with labor market regulation.

AB - This paper develops a tractable version of a two-sector open economy model with search frictions to disentangle the implications of workers' mobility costs and labor market institutions following higher relative productivity of tradables. Using a panel of eighteen OECD countries, our estimates show that higher productivity in tradables relative to non tradables causes a decline in non traded relative to traded wages. The fall in the relative wage reveals the presence of labor mobility costs which mitigate the appreciation in the relative price of non tradables and lower the relative unemployment rate of tradables following higher relative productivity of tradables. Whilst our evidence suggests that such responses have increased over time as the result of decreasing labor mobility costs, our estimates also reveal that the magnitude of the effects vary considerably across countries. Using a set of indicators capturing the heterogeneity of labor market frictions across economies, we find that both the relative wage and the relative unemployment rate of tradables decline significantly more and the relative price appreciates less in countries where labor market regulation is more pronounced. We show that these empirical findings can be rationalized in a two-sector open economy model with search in the labor market as long as we allow for an endogenous sectoral labor force participation decision. When we calibrate the model to country-specific data, numerical results reveal that the responses of the relative wage, the relative price, and to a lesser extent the relative unemployment rate display a wide dispersion acrosscountries. Importantly, all variables display a significant negative relationship with labor market regulation.

KW - Relative productivity of tradables

KW - Search theory

KW - Labor market institutions

KW - Labor mobility

KW - Sectoral price and wage differences

KW - Sectoral unemployment

KW - Current account

M3 - Working paper

T3 - Economics Working Paper Series

BT - Relative productivity and search unemployment in an open economy

PB - Lancaster University, Department of Economics

CY - Lancaster

ER -