NBER Working Paper Series
Опубликовано на портале: 13-10-2004
Olivier Jean Blanchard
NBER Working Paper Series.
2001.
w8120.
Product and labor market deregulation are fundamentally about reducing and redistributing
rents, leading economic players to adjust in turn to this new distribution. Thus,
even if deregulation eventually proves beneficial, it comes with strong distribution
and dynamic effects. The transition may imply the decline of incumbent firms. Unemployment
may increase for a while. Real wages may decrease before recovering, and so on. To
study these issues, we build a model based on two central assumptions: Monopolistic
competition in the goods market, which determines the size of rents; and bargaining
in the labor market, which determines the distribution of rents between workers and
firms. We then think of product market regulation as determining both the entry costs
faced by firms, and the degree of competition between firms. We think of labor market
regulation as determining the bargaining power of workers. Having characterized the
effects of labor and product market deregulation, we then use our results to study
two specific issues. First, to shed light on macroeconomic evolutions in Europe over
the last twenty years, in particular on the behavior of the labor share. Second,
to look at political economy interactions between product and labor market deregulation.

