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Research ArticleArticles

Labor Market Institutions and Wage-Setting Power

Evidence from Latin America and the Caribbean

Francesco Amodio, Emanuele Brancati, Nicolás de Roux and Michele Di Maio
Published online before print April 08, 2026, 0925-14494R1; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3368/jhr.0925-14494R1
Francesco Amodio
†Department of Economics and Institute for the Study of International Development, McGill University, BREAD and CEPR, .
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  • For correspondence: francesco.amodio{at}mcgill.ca
Emanuele Brancati
‡Department of Economics and Law, Sapienza University of Rome and IZA, .
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  • For correspondence: emanuele.brancati{at}uniroma1.it
Nicolás de Roux
§Department of Economics, Universidad de Los Andes, Colombia, .
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  • For correspondence: nicolas.de.roux{at}uniandes.edu.co
Michele Di Maio
¶Department of Economics and Law, Sapienza University of Rome and IZA, .
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  • For correspondence: michele.dimaio{at}uniroma1.it
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Abstract

We measure firms’ wage-setting power in 16 Latin American and Caribbean countries. Exploiting variation in firms’ exposure to trade and exchange rates, we generate shocks to labor demand to trace out firm-level labor supply curves and quantify labor market power. We estimate an inverse labor supply elasticity of 0.82, implying that workers receive 55 cents per additional dollar produced. Wage-setting power is significantly higher among firms in countries with lower union density, limited collective bargaining, and no unemployment protection. This underscores the role of labor market institutions in shaping firms’ wagesetting power and the distribution of the gains from trade.

Keywords:
  • firms
  • labor market power
  • labor institutions
JEL Classification:
  • J31
  • J50
  • O54

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Journal of Human Resources: 61 (1)
Journal of Human Resources
Vol. 61, Issue 1
1 Jan 2026
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Labor Market Institutions and Wage-Setting Power
Francesco Amodio, Emanuele Brancati, Nicolás de Roux, Michele Di Maio
Journal of Human Resources Apr 2026, 0925-14494R1; DOI: 10.3368/jhr.0925-14494R1

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Labor Market Institutions and Wage-Setting Power
Francesco Amodio, Emanuele Brancati, Nicolás de Roux, Michele Di Maio
Journal of Human Resources Apr 2026, 0925-14494R1; DOI: 10.3368/jhr.0925-14494R1
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Keywords

  • firms
  • labor market power
  • labor institutions
  • J31
  • J50
  • O54
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