Article

Real wage cyclicality and the Great Depression: evidence from British engineering and metal working firms

Details

Citation

Hart RA & Roberts JE (2013) Real wage cyclicality and the Great Depression: evidence from British engineering and metal working firms. Oxford Economic Papers, 65 (2), pp. 197-218. https://doi.org/10.1093/oep/gps028

Abstract
Based on occupation-level payrolls from around 2000 member firms of the British Engineering Employers' Federation we examine the behaviour of real hourly earnings over the 1927-1937 Great Depression cycle. Pay and working time data cover adult male blue-collar workers within engineering and metal working firms. We attempt to tackle the problem of countercyclical aggregation bias linked to workforce composition by distinguishing between pieceworkers and timeworkers who are broken down into 14occupations and 51 travel-to-work engineering districts. We test for the likely effects on our estimates of within-occupation heterogeneity. For pieceworkers we find significant, though modest, real hourly wage procyclicality. Timeworkers' real hourly wages are found to be acyclical. Due to procyclical fluctuations in weekly hours, the real weekly pay of both pieceworkers and timeworkers are strongly procyclical. We compare hourly and weekly pay outcomes with findings based on more recent micro data.

Journal
Oxford Economic Papers: Volume 65, Issue 2

StatusPublished
Publication date30/04/2013
Publication date online14/07/2012
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/11205
PublisherOxford University Press (OUP)
ISSN0030-7653