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Does institutional diversity account for pay rules in Germany and Belgium?

Authors :
Kampelmann, Stephan
Rycx, François
Source :
Research series; 11-12, Working Papers DULBEA; 11-12, Working Papers CEB; 11-042
Publication Year :
2011

Abstract

This paper examines the relationship between institutions and the remuneration of different jobs by comparing the German and Belgian labour markets with respect to a typology of institutions (social representations, norms, conventions, legislation, and organisations). The observed institutional differences between the two countries lead to the hypotheses of (I) higher overall pay inequality in Germany; (II) higher pay inequalities between employees and workers in Belgium; and (III) higher (lower) impact of educational credentials (work-post tenure) on earnings in Germany. We provide survey-based empirical evidence supporting hypotheses I and III, but find no evidence for hypothesis II. These results underline the importance of institutional details: although Germany and Belgium belong to the same "variety of capitalism", we provide evidence that small institutional disparities within Continental-European capitalism account for distinct structures of pay.<br />info:eu-repo/semantics/published

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Research series; 11-12, Working Papers DULBEA; 11-12, Working Papers CEB; 11-042
Accession number :
edsair.dedup.wf.001..46502941e7cd33f198bbfcb946025212