Over the past few decades, the rise in inequality in the industrialized world has
led to a major research initiative to investigate its underlying causes. Given the empirical
observation that inequality increases as unionization declines, labor unions have drawn notable attention as a driving force behind this phenomenon. By employing a widely-adopted
reweighting and variance decomposition technique, this paper estimates the overall and
component-specific effects of unions on inequality within and across skill groups in a highlyunequal developing country, Chile, at four points in time over a three-decade period. The
main findings show that unions have a negative, albeit modest, effect on wage variance, which
is larger for females than males, in line with the increase in unionization among women over
the period. The largest effect of unions occurs within-skill groups for females and betweenskill groups for male workers, suggesting a comparatively stronger wage-flattening effect
among men. Overall, the findings of this paper suggest that unions may have a stronger
incidence in wage inequality in the presence of higher unionization. This study also finds
evidence supporting the view that female unionization has positive effects on reducing the
male wage premium.
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Lenguage
dc.language.iso
en
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Publisher
dc.publisher
Universidad de Chile
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Type of license
dc.rights
Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 United States