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Caught in a Trap: Wage Mobility in Great Britain 1957-94
In this paper I study wage mobility in Great Britain using the New Earnings Surveys of 1975-94 and the British Household Panel Surveys of 1991-94. Measuring mobility in terms of decile transition matrices, I find a considerable degree of immobility within the wage distribution from one year to the next. Mobility is higher when measured over longer time periods. Those in lower deciles in the wage distribution are much more likely to exit into unemployment and non-employment. Measuring mobility by studying changes in individuals' actual percentile rankings in the wage distribution, I find evidence that short-run mobility rates have fallen since the late 1970s. This has potentially important welfare implications, given the rise in cross-section earnings inequality observed over the last two decades. Copyright 2000 by The London School of Economics and Political Science
History
Publication status
- Published
Journal
EconomicaISSN
1468-0335Publisher
Blackwell PublishingIssue
268Volume
67Page range
477-97Department affiliated with
- Economics Publications
Notes
Also Published in Centre for Economic Performance Discussion Paper 365 (1997)Institution
Centre for Economic Performance Discussion Paper 365Full text available
- No
Peer reviewed?
- No