"A Biden administration report says
collusion and other constraints on competition hold down pay and prospects in
the labor market.
The recent narrative is that there
is a tight labor market that gives workers leverage. But a new report from the
Biden administration argues that the deck is still stacked against workers,
reducing their ability to move from one employer to another and hurting their
pay.
The report,
released Monday by the Treasury Department, contends that employers often face
little competition for their workers, allowing them to pay substantially less
than they would otherwise.
“There is a recognition that the
idea of a competitive labor market is a fiction,” said Ben Harris, assistant
Treasury secretary in the office of economic policy, which prepared the report.
“This is a sea change in economics.”
The report follows up on a promise
made by President Biden last summer, when he issued an executive order
directing his administration to address excessive concentration in the market
for work.
Drawing from recent economic
research, the report concludes that lack of competition in the job market costs
workers, on average, 15 to 25 percent of what they might otherwise make. And it
emphasizes that the administration will deploy the tools at its disposal to
restore competition in the market for work.
“This is the administration
declaring where it is on the enforcement of antitrust in labor markets,” Tim
Wu, a special assistant to the president for
technology and competition policy on the National Economic Council,
said in an interview in which he laid out the report’s findings. “It is sending
a strong signal about the direction in which antitrust enforcement and policy
is going.”
Across the economy, wage gains
generally come about when a worker changes jobs or has a credible offer from
outside that will encourage the current employer to provide an increase, argues
Betsey Stevenson, a professor of economics at the University of Michigan who
was on President Barack Obama’s Council of Economic Advisers.
“Companies are well aware of this,” she said
in an interview, so they rally around a simple solution: “If we just stop
competing, it will be better for everybody.”
The Treasury report lays out the
many ways in which employers do this. There are noncompete agreements that bar
workers from moving to a competitor, and nondisclosure agreements that keep them
from sharing information about wages and working conditions — critical
information for workers to understand their options. Some companies make
no-poaching deals.
“There is a long list of insidious
efforts to take power out of the hands of workers and seize it for employers’
gain,” said Seth Harris, deputy director at the National Economic Council and
deputy assistant to the president for labor and the economy.
This is happening against a backdrop
of broad economic changes that are hemming in the options of many workers,
especially at the bottom end of the job market.
The outsourcing of work to contractors
— think of the janitors, cafeteria workers and security guards employed by
enormous specialist companies, not by the companies they clean, feed and
protect — reduces the options for low-wage workers, the report argues.
The mergers and acquisitions that have
consolidated hospitals, nursing homes, food processing companies and other
industries have also reduced competition for workers, the study says, curtailing
their ability to seek better jobs.
The report notes, for instance, that
mergers have trimmed the number of hospitals in
the United States to 6,093 in 2021, from 7,156 in 1975. It cites research into
how some of these mergers have depressed the wage growth for nurses, pharmacy
employees and other health workers.
The Treasury’s document is drawn
from a body of research that has been growing since the 1990s, when a seminal paper by David Card and
Alan B. Krueger found that raising the minimum wage did not necessarily reduce
employment and could even produce more jobs.
The conclusion by Mr. Card and Mr.
Krueger, which economists would consider impossible in a competitive labor
market in which rising labor costs would reduce employer demand, started the
discipline down a path to investigate the extent to which employers competed
for workers.
Lack of competition, the Biden
administration argues, goes a long way to explain why pay for a large share of
the American work force is barely higher, after accounting for inflation, than
it was a half-century ago. “The fact that workers are getting less than they
used to is a longstanding problem,” Ms. Stevenson, who was not involved in the
Treasury report, noted.
Anticompetitive practices thrive
when there are fewer competitors. If workers have many potential employers,
they might still agree to sign a noncompete clause, but they could demand a pay
increase to compensate.
Even if there is no conclusive
evidence that the labor market is less competitive than it used to be, the
report says, researchers have concluded that there is, in fact, very little
competition.
Suresh Naidu, a professor of
economics at Columbia University, argues, moreover, that institutions like the
minimum wage and unions, which limited employers from fully exercising their
market power, have weakened substantially over time. “The previously existing
checks have fallen away,” Mr. Naidu said.
Unions are virtually irrelevant across
much of the labor market. Only 6 percent of workers in the private sector
belong to one. The federal minimum wage of $7.25 an hour is so low that it
matters little even for many low-wage workers.
The Treasury report argues that an
uncompetitive labor market is reducing the share of the nation’s income that
goes to workers while increasing the slice that accrues to the owners of
capital. Moreover, employers facing little competition for workers, it argues,
are more likely to offer few benefits and impose dismal working conditions:
unpredictable just-in-time schedules, intrusive on-the-job monitoring, poor
safety, no breaks.
The damage runs deeper, the report
says, arguing that uncompetitive labor markets reduce overall employment.
Productivity also suffers when workers have a hard time moving to new jobs that
could offer a better fit for their skills. Noncompete clauses discourage
business formation when they limit entrepreneurs’ ability to find workers for
their ventures.
Addressing the issues that the report
singles out is likely to be an uphill task. The administration’s push to
increase the federal minimum wage to $15 has been unsuccessful. In Congress,
bills that would ease the path for workers to join a union face long odds.
Going after noncompete clauses,
no-poaching deals and other forms of anticompetitive behavior would be an
easier task.
Last year, the Justice Department’s
antitrust division brought several cases
challenging no-poaching and wage-setting agreements. In January, four managers
of home health care agencies in Maine were indicted on federal charges of
conspiring to suppress the wages and restrict the job mobility of essential
workers during the pandemic.
Still, deploying antitrust
enforcement in the job market is somewhat new. It has been used mostly to ward
off anticompetitive behavior that raises prices for consumers in product and
service markets. Persuading courts to, say, prevent a merger because of its
impact on wages might be tougher.
A note by the law firm White
& Case, for instance, complained that the move to block Penguin
Random House’s attempt to buy Simon & Schuster on the grounds that it would
reduce royalties to authors is “emblematic of the Biden administration’s and
the new populist antitrust movement’s push to direct the purpose of antitrust
away from consumer welfare price effects and towards other social harms.”"
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