ABSTRACT

During much of the 1980s, US wage growth has been unexpectedly slow in the face of relatively low unemployment rates and high capacity utilization rates. This collection of papers resulting from the Wage Structure Conference held by the Federal Research Bank of Cleveland, November 1989, helps explain labour market behaviour in that period. The contributors - academic and research economists in labour economics - provide a comprehensive assessment of the current state of the wage-setting process in the US labour market.

chapter 1|12 pages

Overview

chapter |3 pages

Comments

chapter |3 pages

Comments

chapter |3 pages

Comments

chapter |5 pages

Comments

chapter |4 pages

Comments

chapter |4 pages

Comments

chapter |7 pages

Macroeconomic Implications