Discussion paper

DP16926 Will markets provide humane jobs? A hypothesis

Most of the key amenities of our today jobs did not emerge in private contracts; instead, they appeared in collective agreements and regulations. I argue that understanding this observation can guide the provision of future amenities. I show that markets underprovide an amenity if workers who value it more have a lower average unobserved productivity. Universal mandate of such amenities improves social welfare when taste-productivity correlation is high. Policies that leverage heterogeneity in the taste-productivity correlation by observable characteristics, e.g., quota and tagging, dominate mandate in the presence of a mild adverse selection.

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Citation

Nekoei, A (2022), ‘DP16926 Will markets provide humane jobs? A hypothesis‘, CEPR Discussion Paper No. 16926. CEPR Press, Paris & London. https://cepr.org/publications/dp16926