IFS - A rise in ‘superstar firms’, with many of the rest stagnating, has put upward pressure on wage inequality

3 Mar 2022 09:58 AM

We have seen a long period of stagnation in productivity and wages within most firms while a minority of high-performers – or ‘superstar firms’ – have been the main drivers of productivity and wage growth.

While inequality between firms is not necessarily a problem, it is concerning if large numbers of workers are in poorly performing, less productive firms and not sharing in improvements in living standards. It is also a concern when the growing dispersion in the performance of companies goes hand in hand with a stalling of overall economic performance, a trend already seen in the US.

These are among the findings of new research published today as part of the IFS Deaton Review of Inequalities, funded by the Nuffield Foundation. The report argues that one part of tackling growing inequality between people needs to include tackling the market power enjoyed by some firms and ensuring we have even more robust competition regimes. This needs to go alongside better policies to encourage innovation, skills and investment to raise overall productivity.

Other key findings include:

Professor John Van Reenen (LSE), one of the report authors, said:

‘The most important economic problem for the UK since 2008 has been dismal productivity growth, which in turn has led to pitiful pay increases. Only in a relatively small number of firms, employing a minority of the UK’s workforce, have productivity and wages improved in the past quarter-century.

‘To tackle this, we need a laser-like focus on increasing firm productivity through better policies on innovation, skills and investment as well as robust competition regimes to ensure that there is a level playing field.’

Robert Joyce, a Deputy Director at IFS and on the panel of the IFS Deaton Review of Inequalities, said:

‘When we think about inequality we naturally tend to focus on people’s incomes and earnings. But they result from the way that companies operate and how productive they are. A combination of poor productivity growth for most and the rise of some “superstar” firms has been one of the drivers of both stagnant living standards and inequality in the UK. Any concerted policy aimed at influencing inequalities will therefore need to consider policy on things such as competition, regulation and innovation.’

Firms and inequality