Outsourcing, Inequality and Aggregate Output
Participate
Department of Economics & Decisions Sciences
Guest Speaker: Adrien BILAL
from University of Chicago and Harvard
Videoconference
Abstract:
Outsourced workers experience large wage declines, yet domestic outsourcing may raise
aggregate productivity. To study this equity-efficiency trade-off, we contribute a framework
in which more productive firms either post higher wages along a job ladder to sustain a
larger in-house workforce, comprised of many imperfectly substitutable worker types and
subject to decreasing returns to scale, or rent labor services from contractors who hire in
the same frictional labor markets. Three implications arise: more productive firms are
more likely to outsource to save on higher wage premia; outsourcing raises output at the
firm level; labor service providers endogenously locate at the bottom of the job ladder,
implying that outsourced workers receive lower wages. Using firm-level instruments for
outsourcing and revenue productivity, we find empirical support for all three predictions
in French administrative data. After structurally estimating the model, we find that the
rise in outsourcing in France between 1997 and 2007 contributed to raise aggregate output
by 1% and reduce the labor share by 3 percentage points. A small minimum wage increase
can make outsourcing Pareto-improving and stabilize the labor share.
Zoom link : https://hec-fr.zoom.us/j/98650178348