Trade Liberalization and Wage Inequality: Empirical Evidence from Bangladesh
Abstract
The prediction of standard economic theory that trade liberalization reduces income inequality in
developing countries has been challenged by several studies during recent decades. This paper
explores this issue by analyzing the relationship between trade liberalization and skilled-unskilled
wage inequality in the Bangladesh cotton textile industry. First cointegration analysis is used to
test for long-run relationships between real wages and trade liberalization over the period 1971-
2010, and then a two-equation error correction model is estimated for wages of skilled and
unskilled workers. Trade liberalization, proxied by the evolution of Bangladesh’s international
trade, is associated with increased real wages for both skilled and unskilled workers. The relative
skilled-unskilled workers’ wage fluctuates over the study period, but it has no trend and is not
related to increased openness. Trade liberalization thus seems to have increased labor
productivity in the cotton textile industry without any noticeable effects on wage inequality.
University
Göteborg University. School of Business, Economics and Law
Other description
JEL codes: F13, F14, F15, O15, O24
Collections
View/ Open
Date
2006, ReviAuthor
Munshi, Farzana
Durevall, Dick
Keywords
Bangladesh, openness, relative wages, trade liberalization, wage inequality
Publication type
Report
ISSN
1403-2465
Series/Report no.
Working Papers in Economics, nr 205
Language
en