Abstract

Internal devaluation policies imposed in southern European countries since 2010 have weakened labour market institutions and intensified wage inequality and the falling wage share. The debate in the wake of the financial and economic crisis raised concerns about slow wage growth and persistent economic inequality. This article attempts to shed light on this debate, scrutinising the case of Portugal in the period 2010–2017. Mapping the broad developments at the national level, the article examines four sectors, looking in particular at the impact of minimum wages and collective bargaining on wage trends vis-à-vis wage inequality and wage share trajectories. We conclude that both minimum wage increases and the slight recovery of collective bargaining had a positive effect on wage outcomes and were important in reducing wage inequality. The extent of this reduction was limited, however, by uneven sectoral recovery dynamics and the persistent effects of precarious work, combined with critical liberalisation reforms.

Highlights

  • This article is a contribution to the debate on the persistence of slow wage growth and economic inequality (United Nations, 2015; OECD, 2018), looking at the role of the internal devaluation policies (Blanchard, 2007) implemented in southern European countries

  • Mapping the broad developments at the national level, the article examines four sectors, looking in particular at the impact of minimum wages and collective bargaining on wage trends vis-à-vis wage inequality and wage share trajectories. We conclude that both minimum wage increases and the slight recovery of collective bargaining had a positive effect on wage outcomes and were important in reducing wage inequality

  • Internal devaluation was extremely detrimental in limiting trade union bargaining power

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Summary

Summary

Internal devaluation policies imposed in southern European countries since 2010 have weakened labour market institutions and intensified wage inequality and the falling wage share. Mapping the broad developments at the national level, the article examines four sectors, looking in particular at the impact of minimum wages and collective bargaining on wage trends vis-à-vis wage inequality and wage share trajectories. We conclude that both minimum wage increases and the slight recovery of collective bargaining had a positive effect on wage outcomes and were important in reducing wage inequality. The extent of this reduction was limited, by uneven sectoral recovery dynamics and the persistent effects of precarious work, combined with critical liberalisation reforms.

Introduction
Internal devaluation and policy shifts: exploring the case of Portugal
From freezing the minimum wage to a regular upward trajectory
From deregulating collective bargaining to limited steps forward
The variegated impact of internal devaluation policies at sectoral level
Minimum wage policy and sector-level impacts
Developments in collective bargaining at national and sectoral level
Scrutinising patterns and trends of economic inequality at sectoral level
Inequality of wage distribution and sectoral dynamics
Examining wage share trends at sectoral level
Findings
Conclusion
Full Text
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