Title
Changes in Relative Wages in the 1980s: Returns to Observed and Unobserved Skills and Black-White Wage Differentials
Author(s)
Kenneth Y. Chay Kenneth Chay (University of California, Berkeley)
David S. Lee David Lee (Princeton University)
Abstract
During the 1980s, did the sharp increase in the college-high school wage differential represent a rise in the college premium, or a growth in the payoff to unmeasured ability or skill? Can the slowdown in black-white wage convergence or the widening black-white gap among young workers witnessed during the 1980s be explained by a rise in the return to pre-labor market factors correlated with race? In this study, we show that it is possible to use across-group variation in within-group wage variances from multiple periods to identify the change in the return to unobservable skill, within a relatively unrestrictive error-components model of wages. The identification does not require full specification of the time-series properties or the functional form of the errors. Male earnings data from the CPS show that there is useful variation in within-group wage variances -- enough to estimate a growth in the return to unobservable skill of about 10 to 20 percent during the 1980s. In our analysis, these magnitudes imply that even alter controlling for the effects of an increase in the payoff to unobservable skill, college-educated workers still gain substantially relative to high school-educated workers, while young black men still experience a significant wage decline relative to white men during the l980s.
Creation Date
1996-12
Section URL ID
IRS
Paper Number
372
URL
https://dataspace.princeton.edu/bitstream/88435/dsp01ff3655259/1/372.pdf
File Function
Jel
E37, E39, E4, E40
Keyword(s)
within-group wage variances, returns to unobserved skill, classical errors-in-variables, instrumental variable estimation, omitted-variable bias
Suppress
false
Series
1