Wage convergence and inequality after unification: (East) Germany in transition

Contributions to Edited Volumes and Conference Proceedings // 2009
Contributions to Edited Volumes and Conference Proceedings // 2009

Wage convergence and inequality after unification: (East) Germany in transition

This paper investigates the wage convergence between East German workers and their West German counterparts after reunification. Our research is based on a com-parison of three groups of workers defined as stayers, migrants and commuters to West Germany, who lived in East Germany in 1989, with groups of West German statistical twin workers, all taken from the Socio-Economic Panel (SOEP). Accord-ing to our findings, wage convergence for stayers is roughly 75 percent and for commuters 85 percent. Wages of migrants to West Germany equal the ones of their West German statistical twins. We conclude that labor markets in East and West Germany are still characterized by wage differences but that the degree of inequality in both regions converged.

Gernandt, Johannes and Friedhelm Pfeiffer (2009), Wage convergence and inequality after unification: (East) Germany in transition, in: Ravi Kanbur, Jan Svejnar (Eds.), Routledge Studies in Development Economics, 1, Vol. 73, Routledge (Verlag), London, 387-404