Arbeitspapier
Wage Bargaining and Labor Market Policy with Biased Expectations
Recent research documents mounting evidence for sizable and persistent biases in individual labor market expectations. This paper incorporates subjective expectations into a general equilibrium labor market model and studies the implications of biased expectations for wage bargaining, vacancy creation, worker flows and labor market policies. Importantly, we find that under the widely used period-by-period Nash bargaining protocol, the model generates a counterfactual relationship between workers' job separation expectations and wages. Instead, a wage setting process with less frequent wage renegotiations is found to be empirically consistent. Moreover, we show that the presence of biased beliefs can qualitatively alter the equilibrium effects of labor market policies. Lastly, when allowing for biased firms' beliefs, we establish that only the difference between firms' and workers' biases matters for the bargained wage but not the size of biases.
- Language
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Englisch
- Bibliographic citation
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Series: CESifo Working Paper ; No. 10341
- Classification
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Wirtschaft
Employment; Unemployment; Wages; Intergenerational Income Distribution; Aggregate Human Capital; Aggregate Labor Productivity
Unemployment: Models, Duration, Incidence, and Job Search
Expectations; Speculations
- Subject
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subjective expectations
labor markets
search and matching
bargaining
policy
- Event
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Geistige Schöpfung
- (who)
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Balleer, Almut
Duernecker, Georg
Forstner, Susanne
Goensch, Johannes
- Event
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Veröffentlichung
- (who)
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Center for Economic Studies and ifo Institute (CESifo)
- (where)
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Munich
- (when)
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2023
- Handle
- Last update
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10.03.2025, 11:43 AM CET
Data provider
ZBW - Deutsche Zentralbibliothek für Wirtschaftswissenschaften - Leibniz-Informationszentrum Wirtschaft. If you have any questions about the object, please contact the data provider.
Object type
- Arbeitspapier
Associated
- Balleer, Almut
- Duernecker, Georg
- Forstner, Susanne
- Goensch, Johannes
- Center for Economic Studies and ifo Institute (CESifo)
Time of origin
- 2023