Event

Transforming Institutions: Labor Reallocation and Wage Growth in a Reunified Germany by Tim Lee

Join Tim Lee for this event, which is part of the Macroeconomics Research Seminar Series, Summer Term 2023

  • Tue 25 Apr 23

    16:00 - 17:30

  • Colchester Campus

    5B.307

  • Event speaker

    Tim Lee

  • Event type

    Lectures, talks and seminars
    Macroeconomics Research Seminar Series

  • Event organiser

    Economics, Department of

Join Tim Lee as they present their Macro research on Transforming Institutions: Labor Reallocation and Wage Growth in a Reunified Germany.

Transforming Institutions: Labor Reallocation and Wage Growth in a Reunified Germany by Tim Lee

Join us for this weeks Macroeconomics Research Seminar, Summer Term 2023.

Dr Tim Lee from Queen Mary University of London will present this weeks Macroeconomics seminar.

Abstract

How do institutions affect economic performance? We exploit a unique historical episode, the German Reunification, to investigate how this radical change transformed East Germany’s labor market allocation, igniting wage growth in the early years after reunification. Using matched employer-employee data constructed from the universe of German social security records, we show that the sharp growth in East German wages strongly correlates with a rapid reallocation of workers across plants within East Germany. Moreover, reallocation was disproportionately larger among older cohorts, suggesting that longer exposure to communist institutions led to more severe misallocation: In a competitive market, these older workers would have switched jobs or been fired at a younger age. By the same token, only East German plants that already existed at the time of reunification display different reallocation patterns compared to their Western counterparts: Large plants downsize, indicating that they had previously been inefficiently large, while all plants experience significant levels of worker turnover. We find that plants with larger levels of reallocation experience larger wage growth. This provides rare, direct empirical evidence that the reallocation of workers-both within and across plants-spurred by new labor market institutions, was consequential for wage growth. 

This seminar will be held on campus in the Economics Common Room at 4pm on Tuesday 25 April. This event is open to all levels of study and is also open to the public. To register your place, please contact the seminar organisers.

This event is part of the Macroeconomics Research Seminar Series.