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Working Paper

Matching labor’s share in a search and matching model

Authors

  • Reicher
  • C.

Publication Date

JEL Classification

E24 E25 J23 J31

Key Words

Inflation

labor’s share

productivity

search and matching

staggered Nash bargaining

sticky prices

Sticky wages

Related Topics

Labor Market

Business Cycle World

Business Cycle

I evaluate the degree to which different wage-setting mechanisms in labor market search models can fit the aggregate facts on labor’s share. I find that staggered bargaining in nominal wages best allows the model to plausibly match the negative relationship between labor’s share and lagged productivity growth and inflation. I also evaluate the role of labor’s bargaining weight—a low bargaining weight seems plausible but by itself, it cannot generate the patterns observed in the data. Adding a standard sticky-price mechanism to the model actually degrades the match between the model and the data—in the data, labor’s share is countercyclical, while it is procyclical in the sticky-price model. Theory and data both agree that wage stickiness is relevant at the micro and macro levels.

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