公共部门还是私营部门的工资领导力?一个国际视角

Public or Private Sector Wage Leadership? An International Perspective*

Scandinavian Journal of Economics · 2011
被引 66
人大 A-ABS 3

中文导读

研究了18个OECD国家公共与私营部门工资的因果关系,发现私营部门整体对公共部门影响更强,但公共部门工资领导力在某些国家也会反馈影响私营部门。

Abstract

Abstract Whether a government acts as a wage leader, placing pressure on private‐sector wages (more open to competition), or whether it plays a passive role and merely follows wage negotiations in the private sector, there are important implications for macroeconomic development, particularly in small open economies and/or countries that are members of a monetary union, such as those of the European Monetary Union. With the notable exception of the case of Sweden, opinion on this issue is still divided. In this paper, we look at public‐ and private‐sector wage interactions from an international perspective (18 OECD countries). We focus on the causal two‐way relationship between public and private wage setting, confirming that the private sector, on the whole, appears to have a stronger influence on the public sector, rather than vice versa. However, we also find evidence of feedback effects from public wage setting, which affect private‐sector wages in a number of countries. When the private sector takes the lead on wages, there are few feedback effects from the public sector, while public wage leadership is typically accompanied by private‐sector feedback effects.

公共部门工资私营部门工资工资引领关系国际比较