Labor market effects of exporter pricing behavior: evidence from a developing economy
Labor market effects of exporter pricing behavior: evidence from a developing economy
Despite an extensive literature on exporter pricing behavior, the labor market consequences of exchange rate changes remain relatively under-studied. Using product-level trade data from India, we document incomplete exchange rate pass-through to traded goods prices, suggesting potential adjustments through both output and input markets. Motivated by this, we estimate the effects of currency depreciation on product market power (markup), labor market power (markdown), and overall market power using plant-level data. We find that currency depreciation benefits workers in exporting firms by raising wages toward competitive levels, with stronger effects for managerial than non-managerial workers. Although exporters experience higher markup due to local currency depreciation, a substantial decline in markdown leads to an overall reduction in combined market power. We exploit exogenous exchange rate variations along with historical export shares to address endogeneity concerns. The above findings introduce a novel distributional dimension to the exchange rate pass-through literature.
Kumar, Abhishek
bf1591a0-5a8b-40ae-a3b3-6a4ef990564e
Mallick, Sushanta
24be23c0-3cb6-44b2-8255-f9204b17d06d
23 February 2026
Kumar, Abhishek
bf1591a0-5a8b-40ae-a3b3-6a4ef990564e
Mallick, Sushanta
24be23c0-3cb6-44b2-8255-f9204b17d06d
Kumar, Abhishek and Mallick, Sushanta
(2026)
Labor market effects of exporter pricing behavior: evidence from a developing economy.
Journal of Development Economics, 181, [103723].
(doi:10.1016/j.jdeveco.2026.103723).
Abstract
Despite an extensive literature on exporter pricing behavior, the labor market consequences of exchange rate changes remain relatively under-studied. Using product-level trade data from India, we document incomplete exchange rate pass-through to traded goods prices, suggesting potential adjustments through both output and input markets. Motivated by this, we estimate the effects of currency depreciation on product market power (markup), labor market power (markdown), and overall market power using plant-level data. We find that currency depreciation benefits workers in exporting firms by raising wages toward competitive levels, with stronger effects for managerial than non-managerial workers. Although exporters experience higher markup due to local currency depreciation, a substantial decline in markdown leads to an overall reduction in combined market power. We exploit exogenous exchange rate variations along with historical export shares to address endogeneity concerns. The above findings introduce a novel distributional dimension to the exchange rate pass-through literature.
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Accepted/In Press date: 15 January 2026
e-pub ahead of print date: 6 February 2026
Published date: 23 February 2026
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 510204
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/510204
ISSN: 0304-3878
PURE UUID: e5913b00-97bf-4b3b-b120-c837f6ef2fb8
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Date deposited: 20 Mar 2026 17:45
Last modified: 21 Mar 2026 03:26
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Author:
Abhishek Kumar
Author:
Sushanta Mallick
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