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We investigate the importance of social skills as a driver of wage growth for workers with lower formal education.

Matched employee-employer data from the UK are used to investigate the importance of social skills, in particular team-work and communication with coworkers, as a driver of wage growth for workers with lower formal education. We find that in social skills tasks, workers enjoy greater wage progression with tenure and also accrue higher returns in firms with a higher concentration of more educated colleagues.

Additionally, workers exit sooner from jobs where social skill are more important. We rationalize these dynamics through a model that assesses social skills based on complementarity with a firm’s assets, where social skills, initially opaque to both the employee and employer, become increasingly apparent over time.

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