4.2 Article

Position in global value chains and wages in Central and Eastern European countries

Journal

EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF INDUSTRIAL RELATIONS
Volume 28, Issue 2, Pages 211-230

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS LTD
DOI: 10.1177/09596801211053798

Keywords

wage; Global Value Chains; upstreamness; production fragmentation; Central and Eastern European countries

Funding

  1. National Science Centre, Poland (Narodowe Centrum Nauki-NCN) [UMO-2015/19/B/HS4/02884]
  2. Erasmus+ Programme of the European Union (Jean Monnet Chair in Economics) [574599-EPP-1-2016-1-PL-EPPJMO-CHAIR]
  3. European Commission

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This paper examines the relationship between the relative position of industries in Global Value Chains (GVC) and wages in 10 Central and Eastern European countries. The study finds that workers in these countries earn higher wages when their industries are at the beginning or end of the value chain, compared to being in the middle.
This paper examines the relationship between the relative position of industries in Global Value Chains (GVC) and wages in 10 Central and Eastern European countries. We combine GVC measures of global import intensity of production, upstreamness and the length of the value chain with micro-data on workers. We find that the wages of Central and Eastern European countries workers are higher when their industry is at the beginning of the chain or at the end than in the middle. Secondly, wage changes depend on the interplay between upstreamness and GVC intensity. In sectors close to final demand, greater production fragmentation is associated with lower wages.

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