Stalled Racial Progress and Japanese Trade in the 1970s and 1980s

62 Pages Posted: 21 May 2019

See all articles by Mary Kate Batistich

Mary Kate Batistich

Purdue University

Timothy Bond

Purdue University - Department of Economics

Abstract

Many of the positive economic trends coming out of the Civil Rights Era for black men stagnated or reversed during the late 1970s and early 1980s. These changes were concurrent with a rapid rise in import competition from Japan. We assess the impact of this trade shock on racial disparities using commuting zone level variation in exposure. We find it decreased black manufacturing employment, labor force participation, and median earnings, and increased public assistance recipiency. However these manufacturing losses for blacks were offset by increased white manufacturing employment. This compositional shift appears to have been caused by skill upgrading in the manufacturing sector. Losses were concentrated among black high school dropouts and gains among college educated whites.We also see a shifting of manufacturing employment towards professionals, engineers, and college educated production workers. We find no evidence the heterogeneous effects of import competition can be explained by unionization, prejudice, or changes in spatial mismatch. Our results can explain 66-86% of the relative decrease in black manufacturing employment, 17-23% of the relative rise in black non-labor force participation, and 34-44% of the relative decline in black median male earnings from 1970-1990.

Keywords: race, trade, import competition, black-white wage gap, Japan

JEL Classification: F14, J31, F14, N32, N62

Suggested Citation

Batistich, Mary Kate and Bond, Timothy, Stalled Racial Progress and Japanese Trade in the 1970s and 1980s. IZA Discussion Paper No. 12133, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=3390120 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.3390120

Timothy Bond

Purdue University - Department of Economics ( email )

West Lafayette, IN 47907-1310
United States

Do you have negative results from your research you’d like to share?

Paper statistics

Downloads
115
Abstract Views
637
Rank
436,852
PlumX Metrics