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1992 | Buch

Capabilities, Allocation and Earnings

verfasst von: Joop Hartog

Verlag: Springer Netherlands

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1. 1 INTRODUCTION The final chapter of my Personal Income Distribution, a Hulticapability Theory (Hartog, 1981a) carried as its motto: 'Oh richness of the unfinished'. It concluded a book in which labor services were decomposed into services arising from different capabilities. Individuals were supposed to command stocks of capabilities and to decide on the utilization rates of these capabilities, by balanc­ ing efforts and rewards. The optimal capability bundle they so defined was to be realized by picking the job that just required this bundle. To derive analytical implications on the structure of the labor market and on the distribution of labor earnings, the key assumption was made that arbitrage in capability supply was possible, i. e. , that effectively capabilities could be sold separ­ ately and carried a uniform unit price throughout the labor market. While many interesting analytical and empirical results followed, there was also an indication from empirical testing that an earnings function linear in capabilities could be outperformed by a non-linear func- 2 CAPABILITIES, ALLOCATION AND EARNINGS tion, and that the arbitrage assumption might be un­ tenable. This book attempts to harvest a little from the richness of the unfinished that was left. It returns to some of the old topics and adds some new ones, in a more general model that no longer imposes the assumption that capabilities can be treated as if they can be unbundled. It also draws on new datasets to explore the issues empirically.

Inhaltsverzeichnis

Frontmatter
1. Introduction
Abstract
The final chapter of my Personal Income Distribution, a Multicapability Theory (Hartog, 1981a) carried as its motto: ‘Oh richness of the unfinished’. It concluded a book in which labor services were decomposed into services arising from different capabilities. Individuals were supposed to command stocks of capabilities and to decide on the utilization rates of these capabilities, by balancing efforts and rewards. The optimal capability bundle they so defined was to be realized by picking the job that just required this bundle. To derive analytical implications on the structure of the labor market and on the distribution of labor earnings, the key assumption was made that arbitrage in capability supply was possible, i.e., that effectively capabilities could be sold separately and carried a uniform unit price throughout the labor market. While many interesting analytical and empirical results followed, there was also an indication from empirical testing that an earnings function linear in capabilities could be outperformed by a non-linear function, and that the arbitrage assumption might be untenable.
Joop Hartog
2. Labor Demand
Abstract
In the first chapter it was indicated that a characterization of the demand for labor was sought that would go beyond the mere classification of occupations and jobs. It was indicated that measures exist that allow such an approach. In the present chapter, an analysis of labor demand in those terms will be given, by considering firms’ choices on job requirements and working conditions. The choices will be analyzed separately for the long run and the short run. The analytic structure will then be used to study some questions on the division of labor that have been present in the literature for a long time.
Joop Hartog
3. Schooling and Supply
Abstract
In a model emphasizing that the labor market can be viewed as an implicit market in characteristics, labor supply becomes supply of characteristics. The nature of the predicted supply decisions will of course depend on the conditions used for structuring the model. If individuals are earnings maximizers, if there is a relevant set of characteristics that each carry a positive price (i.e., increasing rewards for higher levels of the characteristics) and if there is a job to match any characteristics combination offered, individuals will opt for the job that fully utilizes all their characteristics. If they are utility maximizers in an unrestricted labor market, and if their preferences extend to the degrees to which they employ their characteristics, they will select a utility maximizing bundle of characteristics and choose the job to match this bundle. This is the way labor supply was modelled in Hartog (1981a), where the extent of capability utilization was evaluated with a CES-utility function, nested in a CES-structure for evaluating the consumption-leisure choice. Labor supply in the short run will be analyzed along similar lines in the next section. Main emphasis in this chapter, however, will be on schooling.
Joop Hartog
4. Equilibrium and Optimum
Abstract
The previous chapters analyzed labor demand and labor supply and indicated the heterogeneity that exists in individuals’ capabilities and in the requirements that the jobs impose. It is now time to take a look at the confrontation of these two decompositions and consider how equilibrium may come about. This will be done by adapting a general specification of an equilibrium from Lucas (1977) and a specific (and elegant) specification due to Tinbergen (1956). The Tinbergen model will be used to draw out some inferences that were not made explicit in the original article. Comparative advantage in the context of the labor market is discussed in section 4.4.
Joop Hartog
5. Implications for Empirical Work
Abstract
The previous chapters have laid out some formal analyses of a labor market theory that decomposes labor into services from different individual capabilities and from differences in the economic value with which they can be put to use. In short, an analysis of allocating heterogeneous workers to heterogeneous jobs. The development has aimed at specifying a theoretical structure useful for understanding labor market events. In this chapter, the transition to applications will be made, by collecting the implied suggestions for empirical analyses (section 5.2), by relating the approach to other empirical work in the literature (section 5.3) and by taking a look at some specific econometric issues (section 5.4). Also, the data used in the analyses are introduced and discussed.
Joop Hartog
6. Allocation
Abstract
This chapter will focus on the allocation of individuals to jobs. The jobs are measured on an ordinal scale, for which some different variables will be used, depending on the dataset (see section 5.5). As an introductory illustration, consider Table 6.1. In that table, a sample of over 1700 individuals is cross-tabulated by education and job level. The job level, explained further in 6.2 and Appendix 5.2, is a measure of job complexity, starting at level 1 with the simplest jobs. The educational classification reflects the Dutch two-track system, with a general (or academic) track and a vocational track; the tracks are not tightly separated however, and cross-overs are quite frequent.
Joop Hartog
7. Earnings
Abstract
It has been stressed throughout this book that earnings are not only determined by personal characteristics. Job characteristics and the structure and distribution of demand are just as important. It is time now to turn to empirical work to substantiate this thesis. This will be done by first testing for the relevance of job level in earnings functions (and comparing specifications) and then search for the earnings function that properly brings out the relation with allocation. One way to indicate the relevance of the demand structure is to estimate rates of return to education in a specification that also includes the effect of “overeducation” and “undereducation”, both for The Netherlands and the U.S. Finally, with the estimation results in hand, some intriguing but speculative results are obtained on the impact of alternative allocation rules, creating deviations from the observed allocation (e.g., one that maximizes total earnings).
Joop Hartog
8. Applications, Conclusions Extensions
Abstract
The previous chapters have laid out some theoretical analyses of the labor market and presented empirical material to support the analyses. Much more can be done, both theoretically and empirically, but this chapter is the concluding one. It will briefly indicate two more applications, one to the analyses of the position of ethnic minorities in The Netherlands and one to observed schooling choices. After that, the accomplishments of this book will be assessed and finally, an indication is given of work that still needs to be done.
Joop Hartog
Backmatter
Metadaten
Titel
Capabilities, Allocation and Earnings
verfasst von
Joop Hartog
Copyright-Jahr
1992
Verlag
Springer Netherlands
Electronic ISBN
978-94-011-2972-5
Print ISBN
978-94-010-5320-4
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-94-011-2972-5