Abstract

We investigate the claim that national labor markets have become more globally interconnected in recent decades. We do so by deriving estimates over time of three different notions of interconnection: (i) the share of labor demand that is export induced (i.e., all labor demand created by foreign entities buying products exported by the home country)—we provide estimates for 40 countries; (ii) the share of workers employed in sectors producing tradable goods or services—68 countries; and (iii) the ratio of the number of jobs that are either located in a tradable sector, or that are involved in producing services that are required by these tradable sectors, to all jobs in the economy, which we call the trade-linked employment share—40 countries. Our estimates lead to the conclusion that the evidence of a large increase in the interconnections between national labor markets is far weaker than commonly asserted: levels of interconnectivity, and the direction of changes over time, vary across notions of interconnection and countries. The main reasons for this are labordisplacing productivity growth in tradable sectors of each economy and the diminishing fraction of national labor forces hired into manufacturing jobs worldwide. We also discuss the implications of our results for different policy debates that each of the three measures is associated with: international coordination of macroeconomic policies (export-induced labor demand), currency devaluations (share of workers producing tradables), and education and labor protection (trade-linked share).

Highlights

  • Politicians, policy makers and journalists frequently allude to the idea that labor markets have become more internationally interconnected

  • We estimate the shares of labor demand that are export induced by combining the National Input– Output Table (NIOT) with data on employment by sector from the 2014 World Input–Output Database Socio-Economic Accounts (WIOD)

  • We make these estimates separately for each country and year. We use these data in the usual way to estimate export-linked demand for labor in each of 35 sectors of each economy, as the gross sales required from that sector to meet demand for the country’s exports, multiplied by the

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Politicians, policy makers and journalists frequently allude to the idea that labor markets have become more internationally interconnected. Higher levels of export-induced labor demand are taken to increase the importance of international coordination to avoid free riding by countries on each other’s stimulus policies This is the notion invoked by policy makers discussing such coordinated interventions (Lagarde 2016, Blanchard 2008). (i) The share of labor demand that is export induced has grown rapidly in some (mostly European) countries, grown slowly in more, and shrunk in a few (mostly advanced nonEuropean) economies This happened because, even as most sectors of most economies became more export oriented, rapid increases in output per worker in the most exportoriented sectors reduced the number of workers they hired.

Definitions and Motivations
Distinctions and Relationships
Relevance of Particular Measures to Particular Policy Discussions
Export-Induced Labor Demand
Results in 2011 EU member dummy Population (in logs) lnGDP_PPP Per capita GDP (in logs)
Tradable Employment
A Composite View for Some Large Economies
DISCUSSION AND IMPLICATIONS
Digit Agriculture
36 | References
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