Abstract

This paper conducts an empirical analysis of the relationship between financialization and neoliberalism and the labor share using panel data composed of twenty-seven European Union countries over nineteen years (from 1995 to 2013). Adopting a Kaleckian perspective, framed in the post-Keynesian literature, financialization and neoliberalism exert a negative influence on the labor share through three different channels: the change in the sectorial composition of economies (the increasing importance of financial activity and the decreasing importance of general government activity), the proliferation of shareholder value orientation, and the deterioration of general workers’ bargaining power. We estimate a labor share equation with the traditional variables (lagged labor share, technological progress, globalization, education, and output growth) and four further measures of financialization and neoliberalism (financial activity, general government activity, shareholder value orientation, and the trade union density rate). The findings show a disruptive relationship between financialization and neoliberalism and the labor share in European Union countries, mainly through the channels of general government activity and shareholder value orientation. It is also found that financialization and neoliberalism have contributed to a fall in the labor share in European Union countries. The technological progress was the main driver of the fall in the labor share in European Union countries, while the output growth was the main supporter. This suggests that the trend of decline in the labor share could intensify in the future taking into account the fears of potential secular stagnation in the current era of financialization and neoliberalism. JEL Classification: C23, D33, E25, E44

Highlights

  • Mainstream economics, understood as a body of traditional/classical theory, states that the labor share and the profit share are constant over time (Bowley 1937; and Kaldor 1961)

  • This paper conducts an empirical analysis of the relationship between financialization and neoliberalism and the labor share using panel data composed of 27 European Union countries over 19 years

  • The findings show a disruptive relationship between financialization and neoliberalism and the labor share in European Union countries, mainly through the channels of general government activity and ‘shareholder value orientation’

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Summary

Introduction

Mainstream economics, understood as a body of traditional/classical theory, states that the labor share and the profit share are constant over time (Bowley 1937; and Kaldor 1961). The labor share has decreased and the profit share has increased in the majority of economies since the 1980s (Jayadev 2007; Stockhammer 2009, 2012 and 2017; Kristal 2010; Dünhaupt 2011; Peralta and Escalonilla 2011; Estrada and Valdeolivas 2012; Lin and Tomaskovic-Devey 2013; among others). Against this backdrop scholars of financialization and neoliberalism, framed in the postKeynesian literature and from a Kaleckian perspective, advocate that financialization and neoliberalism represent an important driver in the fall of the labor share due to three channels (Hein 2012 and 2015; Hein and Detzer 2014; Michell 2014; Hein and Dodig 2015; among others). The third channel is related to the deterioration of the collective bargaining power exerted by trade unions

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