Income dynamics in the United Kingdom and the impact of the Covid-19 recession

被引:5
|
作者
Bell, Brian [1 ,2 ]
Bloom, Nicholas [3 ,4 ]
Blundell, Jack [2 ]
机构
[1] Kings Business Sch, London Sch Econ, London, England
[2] London Sch Econ, Ctr Econ Performance, London, England
[3] Stanford Univ, Dept Econ, Stanford, CA USA
[4] NBER, Cambridge, MA USA
关键词
Income Dynamics; Inequality; Wage Shocks; J01; J30; GREAT-BRITAIN; EARNINGS; WAGES; CYCLICALITY;
D O I
10.3982/QE1872
中图分类号
F [经济];
学科分类号
02 ;
摘要
In this paper, we use an employer-based survey of earnings and hours to set out the key patterns in UK earnings dynamics from 1975 to 2020, with a particular focus on the most recent recession. We demonstrate that (log) earnings changes exhibit strongly procyclical skewness and have become increasingly leptokurtic, and thus less well approximated by a log-normal distribution, over the period of study. This holds across genders and sectors. Exploiting the long duration of our panel, we then explore the responsiveness of earnings and hours to aggregate and firm-level shocks, finding ample heterogeneity in the exposure of different types of workers to aggregate shocks. Exposure is falling in age, firm size, skill level, and permanent earnings, and is lower for unionized and public sector workers. The qualitative patterns of earnings changes across workers observed in the Covid-19 recession of 2020 are broadly as predicted using the previously estimated exposures and size of the shock. Firm-specific shocks are important for wages given the variation in within-firm productivity and the patterns of heterogeneity are markedly different than for aggregate shocks.
引用
下载
收藏
页码:1849 / 1878
页数:30
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] The impact of COVID-19 on elective otolaryngology surgery in a rural hospital in the United Kingdom
    Arman, Sam
    Hopkins, Michael
    Mckean, Simon
    CLINICAL OTOLARYNGOLOGY, 2021, 46 (06) : 1282 - 1285
  • [32] The Impact of the Early Stages of COVID-19 on Mental Health in the United States, Germany, and the United Kingdom
    Mueller, Sandrine R.
    Delahunty, Fionn
    Matz, Sandra C.
    JOURNAL OF PERSONALITY AND SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY, 2023, 124 (03) : 620 - 639
  • [33] Income distribution and income dynamics in the United Kingdom
    Dutta, J
    Sefton, JA
    Weale, MR
    JOURNAL OF APPLIED ECONOMETRICS, 2001, 16 (05) : 599 - 617
  • [34] A COVID-19 model for local authorities of the United Kingdom
    Mishra, Swapnil
    Scott, James A.
    Laydon, Daniel J.
    Zhu, Harrison
    Ferguson, Neil M.
    Bhatt, Samir
    Flaxman, Seth
    Gandy, Axel
    JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL STATISTICAL SOCIETY SERIES A-STATISTICS IN SOCIETY, 2022, 185 : S86 - S95
  • [35] Human Rights and the COVID-19 Pandemic in the United Kingdom
    Amos, Merris
    TEORIA Y REALIDAD CONSTITUCIONAL, 2021, 48 : 125 - 152
  • [36] COVID-19 and Changes in Neurosurgical Workload in the United Kingdom
    ElGhamry, Ahmed Nabil
    Jayakumar, Nithish
    Youssef, Mohamed
    Shumon, Syed
    Mitchell, Patrick
    WORLD NEUROSURGERY, 2021, 148 : E689 - E694
  • [37] COVID-19 and Adolescent Mental Health in the United Kingdom
    Hu, Yang
    Qian, Yue
    JOURNAL OF ADOLESCENT HEALTH, 2021, 69 (01) : 26 - 32
  • [38] Personality and early susceptibility to COVID-19 in the United Kingdom
    Kanazawa, Satoshi
    JOURNAL OF COMMUNITY & APPLIED SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY, 2022, 32 (04) : 786 - 795
  • [39] Income inequality and entrepreneurship: Lessons from the 2020 COVID-19 recession
    Albert, Christoph
    Caggese, Andrea
    Gonzalez, Beatriz
    Martin-Sanchez, Victor
    JOURNAL OF BANKING & FINANCE, 2023, 149
  • [40] One Year on: The Impact of COVID-19 on the Lives of Freelance Orchestral Musicians in the United Kingdom
    Cohen, Susanna
    Ginsborg, Jane
    FRONTIERS IN PSYCHOLOGY, 2022, 13