The Sustainability Wage Gap
Using detailed administrative employer-employee matched data and a novel measure that quantifies the environmental sustainability of different economic activities, we provide evidence that workers earn about 10% lower wages in firms that operate in more sustainable sectors. We hypothesize that this Sustainability Wage Gap arises because workers, especially those with higher skills and from younger cohorts, value environmental sustainability and accept lower wages to work in more environmentally sustainable firms and sectors. Accordingly, we find that the Sustainability Wage Gap is larger for high-skilled workers, especially for those with high non-cognitive skills, and increasing over time. In further analysis, we document that more sustainable firms are also better able to recruit and retain high-skilled workers. We argue that our results are difficult to reconcile with many alternative interpretations suggested in prior research and that the Sustainability Wage Gap carries important implications for firms’ human resource strategies and firm value.