The Causes of earnings growth in African manufacturing: A matched employer-employee panel data analysis
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Date
2003Author
Wambugu, Anthony
Söderbom, Måns
Teal, Francis
Language
enMetadata
Show full item recordAbstract
In this paper we investigate the implications of labour and capital market
imperfections for the relationship between firm size and earnings. To
establish that such a question is of interest we need to show that the firm
size-wage effect cannot be explained by either the observed or unobserved
skills of the workforce or the characteristics of the workplace. To do that we
require data where controls are possible for observable time-varying firm
and worker characteristics, as well as the unobservable characteristics of
both the firm and its workers. Our data is a sample of workers matched with
firms over time so such controls are possible. Changes in wages are shown
to respond to changes both to profits per employee and the size of the firm. It
is argued that these empirical results clearly reject the hypothesis that the
firm-size relationship can be explained by the skills of the workers. They can
be shown to be consistent with some forms of non-competitive theories of
bargaining and efficiency wages