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  • What Do (Thousands of) Union Do? Union-Specific Pay Premia and Inequality

What Do (Thousands of) Union Do? Union-Specific Pay Premia and Inequality

Lorenzo Lagos (Brown University) con Ellora Derenoncourt, François Gerard, & Claire Montialoux

  • Martes, 21 Octubre 2025
  • 12:00 - 13:00
  • Salón 3 - Edificio de Investigación y Posgrados - Lauro Müller 1921

We study the role of union heterogeneity in shaping wages and inequality among unionized workers. Using linked employer-employee data from Brazil and job moves across multi-firm unions, we estimate over 4,800 union-specific pay premia. Unions explain 3–4% of earnings variation. While unions raise wages on average, the standard deviation in union effects is large (6-7%). Validating our approach, wages fall in markets with higher vs. lower union premia following a nationwide right-to-work law. Linking premia to detailed data on union attributes, we find that unions with strike activity, collective bargaining agreements, internal competition, and skilled leaders secure higher wages. High-premium unions compress wage gaps by education while the average union exacerbates them. Post right-to-work, however, worker support for high-premium unions falls when between-group bargaining differentials are large. Our findings show that unions are not a monolith—their structure and actions shape their wage effects and, consequently, worker support.