CES-WP-09-24
Earnings Inequality and Coordination Costs: Evidence from U.S. Law Firms
Luis Garicano, Thomas Hubbard
September 01, 2009
Earnings inequality has increased substantially since the 1970s. Using evidence from
confidential Census data on U.S. law offices on lawyers’ organization and earnings, we study the
extent to which the mechanism suggested by Lucas (1978) and Rosen (1982), a scale of
operations effect linking spans of control and earnings inequality, is responsible for increases in
inequality. We first show that earnings inequality among lawyers increased substantially
between 1977 and 1992, and that the distribution of partner-associate ratios across offices
changed in ways consistent with the hypothesis that coordination costs fell during this period.
We then propose a “hierarchical production function” in which output is the product of skill and
time and estimate its parameters, applying insights from the equilibrium assignment literature.
We find that coordination costs fell broadly and steadily during this period, so that hiring one’s
first associate leveraged a partner’s skill by about 30% more in 1992 than 1977. We find also
that changes in lawyers’ hierarchical organization account for about 2/3 of the increase in
earnings inequality among lawyers in the upper tail, but a much smaller share of the increase in
inequality between lawyers in the upper tail and other lawyers. These findings indicate that new
organizational efficiencies potentially explain increases in inequality, especially among
individuals toward the top of the earnings distribution.
55 Pages 293310 Bytes
View Paper
|