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Presented By: Department of Economics

Labor Market Power, Self-Employment, and Development (joint (with F. Amodio and M. Morlacco).

Pamela Medina, University of Toronto Scarborough

Labor Market Power, Self-Employment, and Development (joint (with F. Amodio and M. Morlacco). Labor Market Power, Self-Employment, and Development (joint (with F. Amodio and M. Morlacco).
Labor Market Power, Self-Employment, and Development (joint (with F. Amodio and M. Morlacco).
This paper shows that self-employment shapes labor market power in low-income countries, with implications for industrial development. Using Peruvian data, we show that wage-setting power increases with concentration, but less so where self-employment is more prevalent. We build a general equilibrium model of oligopsony with worker sorting between wage work and self-employment. Concentration depresses wages, but self-employment increases workers’ sensitivity to wage changes, curbing labor market power. Policies to create salaried jobs make self-employment less attractive, reducing labor supply elasticity and increasing markdowns. Counterfactual analyses show that eliminating labor market power can boost industrial policy effectiveness by up to 60%.


This talk is presented by the International Economics Seminar, sponsored by the Department of Economics with generous gifts given through the Economics Strategic Fund.
Labor Market Power, Self-Employment, and Development (joint (with F. Amodio and M. Morlacco). Labor Market Power, Self-Employment, and Development (joint (with F. Amodio and M. Morlacco).
Labor Market Power, Self-Employment, and Development (joint (with F. Amodio and M. Morlacco).

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