Data and code: Nominal wage patterns, monopsony, and labour market power in early modern England
Records of long-eighteenth-century English wage rates exhibit almost absolute nominal rigidity over many decades, alongside significant dispersion between the wages paid by different organisations for the same type of work in the same location. These features of preindustrial wages have been obscured by data aggregation and the construction of real wage series, which introduce variation. In this paper we argue that the standard explanations for wage rigidity in economic history are insufficient. We show econometric evidence for monopsony power in one major organisation and argue that the main historical wage series are also affected by employer power. Eighteenth-century England had an imperfectly competitive labour market with large frictions. This gave large organisations the power to set wage policies. We discuss the implications for the eighteenth-century British economy and research into long-run wages more generally.
| Item Type | Dataset |
|---|---|
| Publisher | OpenICPSR |
| DOI | 10.3886/e198145 |
| Date made available | 5 February 2024 |
| Keywords | eighteenth century england, wages, real wages, construction, monopsony, labour markets, industrial revolution |
| Temporal coverage |
From To 1675 1790 |
| Geographic coverage | England |
| Resource language | Other |
| Departments | LSE |
Explore Further
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Paker, M., Stephenson, J.
& Wallis, P.
(2025). Nominal wage patterns, monopsony, and labour market power in early modern England. Economic History Review, 78(1), 179 - 206. https://doi.org/10.1111/ehr.13346 (Repository Output)