Pause

CID Graduate Student and Postdoctoral Fellow Working Paper No. 1

September 2004

Institutions, Wages and Inequality:  The Case of Europe and its Periphery (1500-1899)

Davin Chor

Abstract

This paper explores the long-run relationship between institutions and wage inequality in Europe and its periphery using a two-sector model. When institutions improve, wages rise across the board, thus reducing the costs of rural-urban migration and skills acquisition relative to the expected urban wage. The subsequent increase in the supply of urban craftsmen can in turn lead to a narrowing of the relative gap between skilled and unskilled wages. These predictions are borne out by the historical data. Cities with stronger institutions experienced: (i) higher skilled and unskilled real wages, and (ii) lower levels of urban inequality, as measured by the skilled-unskilled wage ratio.

Keywords: Institutions, Wage inequality, Rural-urban migration, European cities

JEL codes: J31, N13, N33, O10, O15

Download the paper in PDF format

Print print | Email email