Working Paper

17/015

Measuring Rents from Public Employment: Regression Discontinuity Evidence from Kenya

Authors

Nicholas Barton

Goethe University Frankfurt

Image of Tessa Bold

Tessa Bold

RISE Ethiopia

University of Stockholm

Image of Justin Sandefur

Justin Sandefur

Intellectual Leadership Team

Center for Global Development

Public employees in many developing economies earn much higher wages than similar private-sector workers. These wage premia may reflect an efficient return to effort or unobserved skills, or an inefficient rent causing labor misallocation. To distinguish these explanations, we exploit the Kenyan government’s algorithm for hiring eighteen-thousand new teachers in 2010 in a regression discontinuity design. Fuzzy regression discontinuity estimates yield a civil-service wage premium of over 100 percent (not attributable to observed or unobserved skills), but no effect on motivation, suggesting rent-sharing as the most plausible explanation for the wage premium.

Citation:

Barton, N., Bold, T., and Sandefur, J. 2017. Measuring Rents from Public Employment: Regression Discontinuity Evidence from Kenya. RISE Working Paper Series. 17/015. https://doi.org/10.35489/BSG-RISE-WP_2017/015