Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://hdl.handle.net/10419/202502 
Year of Publication: 
2019
Series/Report no.: 
GUT FME Working Paper Series A No. 2/2019 (54)
Publisher: 
Gdańsk University of Technology, Faculty of Management and Economics, Gdańsk
Abstract: 
This paper investigates how involvement in Global Value Chains (GVCs) affects working conditions. We use linked employer-employee data from the Structure of Earnings Survey merged with industry-level statistics on GVCs based on the World Input-Output Database. The sample consists of almost 9 million workers in 24 European countries in 2014. Given the multidimensional nature of the dependent variable, we compare the estimates resulting from a Mincerian wage model with zero-inflated negative binomial regressions that analyse other aspects of working conditions (overtime work and bonus payments). As to the impact of production fragmentation on social upgrading, wages prove to be negatively related to sectoral GVC involvement. Workers in sectors more deeply involved in GVCs have lower and less stable earnings, meaning worse working conditions; on the other hand, they are also less likely to have to work overtime, which one may see as a sign of better labour standards
Subjects: 
working conditions
Global Value Chains
wellbeing of workers
social upgrading
JEL: 
F16
F66
J81
Creative Commons License: 
cc-by-nc-nd Logo
Document Type: 
Working Paper

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