Workers beneath the floodgates: Low-wage import competition and workers' adjustment

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Abstract

Using employee-employer matched data, I analyze the impact of a low-wage trade shock on manufacturing workers in a high-wage country, Denmark, and how they adjust to the shock over a decade. I derive causal effects by exploiting the dismantling of the Multifiber Arrangement quotas on products from China upon its WTO accession as a quasi-natural experiment and use within-industry, within-occupation heterogeneity in workers' exposure to this shock. I find significant negative long-run effects on earnings and employment trajectories and identify job instability in the service sector as a main adjustment friction, concentrated among workers with manufacturing-specific education and occupation. The results establish the importance of specific human capital in trade adjustment and provide evidence of skill upgrading as workers rebuild lost human capital through education.

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APA

Utar, H. (2018). Workers beneath the floodgates: Low-wage import competition and workers’ adjustment. Review of Economics and Statistics, 100(4), 631–647. https://doi.org/10.1162/rest_a_00727

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