工资与生产率增长的关系如何

R. Anderson
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引用次数: 15

摘要

在很长一段时间内,“实际”工资的增长——即根据消费价格变化调整的工资——反映了劳动生产率的增长。经济学家现在普遍认为,劳动生产率在20世纪90年代中期有所提高,而且目前仍保持在较高水平——至少与1973年至20世纪90年代中期的缓慢增长相比是这样。许多研究将生产率加速的原因归结为半导体生产中的技术创新,这些技术创新大幅降低了此类组件和包含它们的产品的价格(以及扩展了此类产品的功能)。更快的生产率增长对工资的影响仍然是广泛的经济研究的主题。许多新闻文章讨论了工资显然未能与生产率同步增长的问题。人们可能不太重视的一点是,生产率的加速一直伴随着企业对员工薪酬方式的重大变化。特别重要的是“可变薪酬”的使用越来越多,也就是说,薪酬要么与员工个人的表现挂钩,要么与企业的整体表现挂钩,包括年终奖金、“现金奖励”、利润分享和股票期权。该图表将非农业商业部门的劳动生产率与两种实际劳动报酬的衡量标准进行了比较:上图为非监督和生产工人(AHE)的平均小时收入,下图为每小时总报酬。AHE衡量的是典型的计划小时工资加上法律规定的福利,但不包括可变的加班费、奖金、轮班保险费和雇主福利。相比之下,总薪酬包括可变薪酬。在整个1999年,这些补偿序列的增长与生产率密切相关。然而,从2000年开始,AHE越来越低于生产力,2003年之后几乎没有增加。直到2003年,总薪酬仍保持接近,但没有跟随2003年生产率增长的上升(这一行为仍是未来研究的主题)。长期以来,经济学家们一直注意到,关注AHE而不是总薪酬会导致劳动报酬的不准确图景,因为AHE中遗漏了雇主提供的福利。越来越多地使用可变薪酬的趋势为集中注意更广泛的补偿措施提供了另一个理由。但是,为什么更多的劳动报酬变成了浮动工资?为什么这种趋势自2000年以来扩大了?其中一个原因可能是,生产率加速的特征在2000年前后发生了变化。在此之前,研究表明,更重要的影响是资本对劳动力比率的增加(资本深化),因为企业用相对便宜的信息技术和通信设备代替劳动力。自2000年以来,一些研究表明,更重要的因素是商业实践的重新设计,这增加了劳动力市场的“技能偏见”,即为更高水平的技术、专业和管理教育和经验支付的溢价。对于雇主来说,浮动工资在一定程度上解决了监控这些工人表现的问题:与传统工厂和零售服务工人的工作时间相对容易监控不同,许多熟练的专业人员在不同的地点和时间工作。最后,越来越依赖可变薪酬或许也是企业和员工之间的一种风险分担安排。如果最近的生产率趋势放缓,减少或削减可变工资对专业工人的冒犯可能比减少基本工资要小。工资如何跟随生产率增长?
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
How well do wages follow productivity growth
Over long periods of time, increases in “real” wages—that is, wages adjusted for changes in consumer prices—reflect increases in labor productivity. Economists now widely agree that labor productivity growth increased in the mid-1990s and remains at an elevated pace—at least relative to its anemic pace between 1973 and the mid-1990s. Numerous studies have traced the cause of the productivity acceleration to technological innovations in the production of semiconductors that sharply reduced the prices of such components and of the products that contain them (as well as expanding the capabilities of such products). The impact of more rapid productivity growth on wages continues to be a topic of widespread economic research. Numerous news articles have discussed the apparent failure of wages to increase in line with productivity. Less appreciated, perhaps, is that the productivity acceleration has been accompanied by important changes in the way businesses compensate their employees. Of particular importance is the increased use of “variable pay,” that is, compensation tied either to the performance of individual employees or to the business’s overall performance, including end-ofyear bonuses, “cash awards,” profit sharing, and stock options. The chart compares labor productivity in the nonfarm business sector to two measures of real labor compensation: average hourly earnings for non-supervisory and production workers (AHE) in the upper panel, and total compensation per hour in the lower panel. AHE measures the typical, scheduled hourly wage plus legally required benefits but excludes variable pay—overtime, bonuses, shift premiums, and employer benefits. Total compensation, in contrast, includes variable pay. Increases in these compensation series track productivity quite closely through 1999. Beginning in 2000, however, AHE falls increasingly below productivity and increases little after 2003. Total compensation remains close until 2003, but does not follow 2003’s uptick in productivity growth (behavior which remains a topic for future research). Economists long have noted that focusing on AHE rather than total compensation yields an inaccurate picture of labor compensation due to the omission from AHE of employer-provided benefits. The trend toward increased use of variable pay provides an additional reason for focusing on broader compensation measures. But, why has more of labor compensation become variable pay? And why has this trend widened since 2000? One reason, perhaps, is that the character of the productivity acceleration changed circa 2000. Prior to that date, studies have suggested that the more important effect was an increasing ratio of capital to labor (capital deepening) as businesses substituted relatively less expensive information technology and communication equipment for labor. Since 2000, some studies suggest that the more important factor has been a re-engineering of business practices, which has increased the “skill bias” in the labor market, that is, the premium paid for higher levels of technical, professional, and managerial education and experience. For employers, variable pay solves, in part, the problem of monitoring the performance of such workers: Unlike traditional factory and retail service workers, whose hours at work are relatively easily monitored, many skilled professionals work at varied locations and times of day. Finally, increasing reliance on variable pay also perhaps is a type of risksharing arrangement between businesses and workers. If the recent productivity trend slows, reducing or curtailing variable pay may be less offensive to professional workers than reductions in base salaries. How Well Do Wages Follow Productivity Growth?
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