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Labor Earnings Inequality in Manufacturing during the Great Depression
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 20 April 2020
Abstract
We study labor earnings inequality during the Great Depression using establishment-level information from the Census of Manufactures (COM). Inequality, as measured by the interquartile range in earnings per worker, declines by 10 log points between 1929 and 1933. However, by 1935, this difference has recovered to its 1929 level. In a decomposition, this decline and then rise in inequality is entirely explained by returns to observable factors, most notably the skill premium and regional differentials. The exit of establishments plays an important role in the initial decline in inequality but barely any role in the recovery.
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- © The Economic History Association 2020
Footnotes
We thank participants at the NBER SI 2015 DAE, Census Bureau, William & Mary, UW–La Crosse, Florida State, Gettysburg College, Northwestern University, EBHS 2017, the Washington Area Economic History Seminar, the University of Michigan, and the University of Guelph for useful comments. We thank Dave Donaldson, Rick Hornbeck, and Jamie Lee for providing county-level data for the 1929 Census of Manufactures. We thank Miguel Morin for providing some of the published totals for the 1935 Census of Manufactures. The National Science Foundation (SES #1122509 and #1459263) and the University of Iowa provided funding.
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