Globalisation and wage inequality

by Elhanan Helpman

Date
19 Jul 2017
Digital Object Identifier
https://doi.org/10.5871/jba/005.125

Full text posted to Journal of the British Academy, volume 5, pp. 125-162.

Abstract: Globalisation has been blamed for rising inequality in rich and poor countries. Yet the views of many protagonists in this debate are not based on evidence. To help form an evidence-based opinion, I review in this paper the theoretical and empirical literature on the relationship between globalisation and wage inequality. While the initial analysis that started in the early 1990s focused on a particular mechanism that links trade to wages, subsequent research has considered several other channels, and the quantitative assessment of the size of these influences has been carried out in multiple studies. Building on this work, I conclude that trade played an appreciable role in increasing wage inequality, but that its cumulative effect has been modest, and that globalisation does not explain the preponderance of the rise in wage inequality within countries.

Keywords: globalisation, inequality, wages, trade.

Keynes Lecture in Economics, read 28 September 2016 (audio recording)

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