Abstract
Labor is likely to be an important claimant to firms' rents, particularly in a regulated environment. This study analyzes wage responses to trucking deregulation to test labor rent-sharing hypotheses. The results indicate substantial declines in union wages as a consequence of reduced regulatory rents. Union premia over nonunion wages fell from 50 percent to less than 30 percent, implying aggregate annual losses of $950 million to $1.6 billion. Rent spillovers to nonunion drivers and truck drivers outside the regulated trucking industry appear insignificant. The results suggest that union workers captured more than two-thirds of total industry rents and provide strong support for union rent-sharing hypotheses. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Rose, N. L. (1987). Labor Rent Sharing and Regulation: Evidence from the Trucking Industry. Journal of Political Economy, 95(6), 1146–1178. https://doi.org/10.1086/261509
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