How Do Firing Costs Affect Worker Flows in a World with Adverse Selection?
This article provides theoretical and empirical analyses of a firing costs model with adverse selection. Our theory suggests that, as firing costs increase, firms increasingly prefer hiring employed workers, who are less likely to be lemons. Estimates of re-employment probabilities from the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth support this prediction. Unjust-dismissal provisions in U.S. states reduce the re-employment probabilities of unemployed workers relative to employed workers. Consistent with a lemons story, the relative effects of unjust-dismissal provisions on the unemployed are generally smaller for union workers and those who lost their previous jobs due to the end of a contract.
Year of publication: |
2004
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Authors: | Kugler, Adriana D. ; Saint-Paul, Gilles |
Published in: |
Journal of Labor Economics. - University of Chicago Press. - Vol. 22.2004, 3, p. 553-584
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Publisher: |
University of Chicago Press |
Saved in:
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