Discussion paper

DP20047 Trade Liberalization and Working Conditions

This paper examines how trade liberalization-induced labor demand shocks affect wages and non-wage working conditions. Using exogenous trade shocks from EU enlargement and worker-level data, we find that export liberalization increases temporary contracts and atypical work schedules, particularly for production workers. However, it has no significant effect on wages, which may reflect firms’ ability to expand employment without raising pay due to labor supply elasticity and unemployment. Import liberalization weakly affects working conditions but, consistent with previous studies, lowers wages as firms face stronger competition and reduced labor demand.

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Citation

Alvarez, B, G Orefice and F Toubal (2025), ‘DP20047 Trade Liberalization and Working Conditions‘, CEPR Discussion Paper No. 20047. CEPR Press, Paris & London. https://cepr.org/publications/dp20047