Abstract

The paper examines the development of wage inequality in Hungary between 1995 and 2016, based on the theories that explain the labour market impact of information and communication technologies (ICT). The analysis is based on the Hungarian Wage Survey Database and uses the empirical methods in the literature to calculate the change of the employment shares and wages of various jobs. As in most countries, the Hungarian labour market became polarized, but this has not been accompanied with wage polarization. Rather, the increase of wages was inversely proportional with skill. The paper proposes two reasons for this behaviour: one is the large increase in the minimum wage, while the other the educational expansion which increased the labour supply of highly skilled workers.

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