Estimating Labor Market Power
    Working Paper 30365
  
        
    DOI 10.3386/w30365
  
        
    Issue Date 
  
          Job differentiation gives employers market power, allowing them to pay workers less than their marginal productivity. We estimate a differentiated jobs model using application data from Careerbuilder.com. We find direct evidence of substantial job differentiation. Without the use of instruments for wages, job applications appear very inelastic with respect to wages. Plausible instruments produce elastic firm-level application supply curves. Under some assumptions, the implied market level labor supply elasticity is 0.5, while the firm level labor elasticity is 4.8. This suggests that workers may produce 21% more than their wage level, consistent with significant monopsony power.
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      Copy CitationJosé A. Azar, Steven T. Berry, and Ioana Marinescu, "Estimating Labor Market Power," NBER Working Paper 30365 (2022), https://doi.org/10.3386/w30365.