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Author(s)

Benjamin Friedrich

This paper shows robust effects of trade shocks on within-firm wage inequality through changes in firm hierarchies. It uses two distinct research designs\textemdash one considering firm-level shocks to foreign demand and transportation costs, the other analyzing the Muslim boycott of Danish exports after the 2006 ``Cartoon Crisis''. Consistent with knowledge-based and incentive-based hierarchy models, trade shocks affect organizational choices through production scale. Adding a hierarchy layer increases inequality throughout the organization, particularly widening the 90-50 wage gap and pay differences between top and bottom layers. Delayering after the boycott leads to wage compression through wage cuts, demotions, and employee turnover.
Date Published: 2022
Citations: Friedrich, Benjamin. 2022. Trade Shocks, Firm Hierarchies and Wage Inequality. The Review of Economics and Statistics. (4)652-667.