Employment Protection Legislation and Firm Growth : Evidence from a Natural Experiment
Data(s) |
2014
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Resumo |
A natural experiment is used to identify the causal relationship between employment protection legislation and fi rm growth. The natural experiment occurred in Sweden in 2001, when an exemption made it possible for fi rms with less than eleven employees to exclude two workers from the last-in-fi rst-out principle when dismissing personnel. The estimated average treatment effect of the reform show that the number of employees increased with 0.135 percent in fi rms with 5-9 employees relative to fi rms with 10-15 employees, which corresponds to over 5,000 additional jobs per year created by the reform. Firms with ten employees, just below the size threshold, became 3.4 percent less likely to increase their workforce to a level surpassing the threshold, indicating that the last-in- first-out rule prevented these firms from growing. Thus, employment protection legislation seems to act as a growth barrier for small fi rms. |
Formato |
application/pdf |
Identificador | |
Idioma(s) |
eng |
Publicador |
Högskolan Dalarna, Nationalekonomi Högskolan Dalarna, Nationalekonomi Högskolan Dalarna, Nationalekonomi Örebro university HUI Borlänge |
Relação |
Working papers in transport, tourism, information technology and microdata analysis, 1650-5581 ; 2014:05 |
Direitos |
info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess |
Palavras-Chave | #Firm growth #Growth barriers #Employment protection |
Tipo |
Report info:eu-repo/semantics/report text |