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Disentangling Labor Supply and Demand Shifts Using Spatial Wage Dispersion: The Case of Oil Price Shocks

November 2013

Working Paper Number:

CES-13-57

Abstract

We separate changes in labor supply and demand through changes in higher-order moments of the wage distribution. We illustrate this idea in a study of the effects of oil price shocks, which generate a predictable labor demand adjustment across regions. Empirically, oil price shocks decrease average wages, particularly skilled wages, and increase wage dispersion, particularly unskilled wage dispersion. In a model with spatial energy intensity differences and nontradables, labor demand shifts, while explaining the response of average wages to oil price shocks, have counterfactual implications for the response of wage dispersion. Only shifts in labor supply can explain this latter fact.

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:
economist, demand, endogeneity, market, macroeconomic, employ, labor, recession, shift, heterogeneous, heterogeneity, relocating, worker, wages production, regress, earn, labor markets, rent, relocate

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:
Bureau of Labor Statistics, Annual Survey of Manufactures, Center for Economic Studies, Ordinary Least Squares, Current Population Survey, Manufacturing Energy Consumption Survey, Retirement History Survey, Chicago Census Research Data Center, Special Sworn Status, VAR

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