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Pay Growth, Fairness and Job Satisfaction: Implication for Nominal and Real Wage Rigidity

Pay Growth, Fairness and Job Satisfaction: Implication for Nominal and Real Wage Rigidity

130/2013 Jennifer C Smith
political economy, working papers
The Scandinavian Journal of Economics
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/sjoe.12091

130/2013 Jennifer C Smith

Theories of wage rigidity often rely on a positive relationship between pay changes and utility, arising from concern for fairness or gift exchange. Supportive evidence has emerged from laboratory experiments, but the link has not yet been established with field data. This paper contributes a first step, using representative British data. Workers care about the level and the growth of earnings. Below-median wage increases lead to an insult effect except when similar workers have real wage reductions or firm production is falling. Nominal pay cuts appear insulting even when the firm is doing badly

Political Economy

The Scandinavian Journal of Economics

http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/sjoe.12091