Strategic Wage Setting and Coordination Frictions with Multiple Applications
June 2004
Research Paper
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We examine wage competition in a model where identical workers choose the number of jobs to apply for and identical firms simultaneously post a wage. The Nash equilibrium of this game exhibits the following properties: (i) an equilibrium where workers apply for just one job exhibits unemployment and absence of wage dispersion; (ii) an equilibrium where workers apply for two or for more (but not for all) jobs always exhibits wage dispersion and, typically, unemployment; (iii) the equilibrium wage distribution with a higher vacancy-to-unemployment ratio first-order stochastically dominates the wage distribution with a lower level of labor market tightness; (iv) the average wage is non-monotonic in the number of applications; (v) the equilibrium number of applications is non-monotonic in the vacancy-to-unemployment ratio; (vi) a minimum wage increase can be welfare improving because it compresses the wage distribution and reduces the congestion effects cause! d by the socially excessive number of applications; and (vii) the only way to obtain efficiency is to impose a mandatory wage that eliminates wage dispersion altogether.
- J64 : Unemployment: Models, Duration, Incidence, and Job Search
- D62 : Externalities
- J23 : Employment Determination; Job Creation; Demand for Labor; Self-Employment
- D83 : Search; Learning; Information and Knowledge
- J41 : Contracts: Specific Human Capital, Matching Models, Efficiency Wage Models, and Internal Labor Markets
- worker
- application
- equilibrium
- probability
- number
- vacancy
- increase
- distribution
- result
- market
- offer
- wage distribution
- unemployment
- candidate
- wage dispersion
- equilibrium number
- labor
- figure
- condition
- technology