Séminaire

Declining Labor Shares and the Global Rise of Corporate Saving

Brent Neiman (University of Chicago-Booth School of Business)

23 avril 2013, 15h30–17h00

Toulouse

Salle MS 001

Political Economy Seminar

Résumé

The stability of the labor share is a key foundation in macroeconomic models. We document, however, that the global labor share has significantly declined over the last 30 years. This decline was associated with a significant increase in corporate saving, generally the largest component of national saving. We relate the labor share to corporate saving empirically and theoretically using a model featuring CES production and imperfections in the ow of funds between households and corporations. These two departures from the standard neoclassical model imply that the labor share uctuates and that corporate saving affects macroeconomic allocations. We argue that it is important to study the labor share and corporate saving jointly, and offer a unified explanation for their trends. A global decline in the cost of capital beginning around 1980 induced firms to shift away from labor and toward capital, financed in part with an increase in corporate saving.

Mots-clés

Labor Share; Production Function; Corporate Saving; Capital Market Imperfections;

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