Events

Informational Barriers to Compensatory Bargains: Why Workers Defend Obsolete Jobs

  • 19 May 2026

    12:30-14:00, Lecture Theatre, Nuffield College

  • Political Science Seminars   Add to Calendar
Speaker: Alexander Trubowitz

Nuffield College

This event is part of the Political Science Seminar series.

This paper presents a novel explanation of why workers may seek to defend obsolete jobs rather than accepting compensation for job loss. Existing scholarship explains the non-emergence of compensatory bargains with reference to commitment problems. I show that information problems can prevent the emergence of compensatory bargains even if the government can fully commit. Incomplete information prevents the government from screening between the intended beneficiaries of its compensation policy and opportunistic claimants. To limit opportunism, the maximum compensation that a government can offer is less than the expected costs of job loss. This, however, preserves the intended beneficiaries’ incentive to defend their jobs. Empirically, I study the failure of a compensatory solution to technological job losses in postwar Britain. New evidence from government and union archives shows that information problems deterred the government from offering full compensation to displaced workers, leading to the persistence of inefficient conflict in British industry.

The Political Science Seminar Series is convened by Desmond King and David Rueda For more information on this or any of the seminars in the series, please contact politics.secretary@nuffield.ox.ac.uk