Equality Under Threat by the Talented: Evidence from Worker-Managed Firms
In: The Economic Journal, Volume 126, Issue 594, p. 1372-1403
9 results
Sort by:
In: The Economic Journal, Volume 126, Issue 594, p. 1372-1403
Are high-ability individuals more likely to quit egalitarian regimes? Does the threat of exit by talented individuals restrict the redistributive capacity of democratic organizations? This paper revisits that long-standing debate by analyzing the interplay between compensation structure and quit behavior in the distinct yet underexplored institutional setting of worker-managed firms. The study exploits two novel administrative data sources: a panel of Uruguayan workers employed in both worker-managed and conventional firms; and a linked employer–employee panel data set covering the population of Uruguayan worker-managed firms and their workers from January 1997 to April 2010. A key advantage of the data is that it enables one to exploit within-firm variation on wages to construct an ordinal measure of the worker ability type. The paper's four main findings are that (1) worker-managed firms redistribute in favor of low-wage workers; (2) in worker-managed firms, high-ability members are more likely than other members to exit; (3) the hazard ratio of high-ability members is lower for founding members and for those employed by worker-managed firms in which there is less pay compression; and (4) high-ability members are less likely to quit when labor market conditions in the capitalist sector are less attractive. This paper contributes to the study of the interplay between equality and incentives that permeates many debates in public finance, comparative economic systems, personnel and organizational economics.
BASE
This paper provides evidence on the effect of employee representation on working time flexibility in private-sector European establishments. A 2002 European Union directive granted information, consultation and representation rights to employees on a range of key business, employment and work organization issues beyond a certain firm size. We exploit the quasi-experimental variation in employee representation introduced by the implementation of the Directive in four countries (Cyprus, Ireland, Poland and the UK) with no previous legislation on the subject. The empirical analysis is based on repeated cross-section establishment-level data from the last three rounds of the European Company Survey. Difference-in-difference estimates suggest that the Directive had a positive and significant effect on both employee representation and the utilisation of flexible working-time arrangements for eligible establishments. The greater use of flexible working-time schemes is driven by establishments in which no local wage-negotiations take place and those with a high proportion of female workers. Our results are consistent with the idea that employee representation provides an endogenous rule-enforcement mechanism in second-best scenarios in which incomplete contracting problems are pervasive and third-party arbitration is unfeasible. Quite paradoxically, the relaxation of shareholders' property rights and the limits imposed on managerial discretion as a result of the operation of employee representation seem necessary to achieve certain valuable forms of organizational flexibility in market economies.
BASE
In: Revista CEPAL, Volume 2009, Issue 98, p. 147-163
ISSN: 1682-0908
In: CEPAL review, Issue 98, p. 141-158
ISSN: 0251-2920
World Affairs Online
In: Revista CEPAL, Issue 98, p. 147-163
ISSN: 0252-0257
Los programas de transferencias monetarias han cobrado gran importancia en América Latina. La preocupación por su adecuada focalización se ha centrado en excluir a las personas que no cumplen los requisitos de elegibilidad. En cambio, se ha prestado menos atención al hecho de que ellos no alcanzan a la totalidad de su población objetivo, en parte debido a que un conjunto de personas ni siquiera solicita los beneficios. En el presente artículo se analizan los factores determinantes de la no solicitud de prestaciones sociales. El caso estudiado es el Plan de Atención Nacional a la Emergencia Social, un programa de transferencia de ingresos implementado en el Uruguay entre 2005 y 2007. Se cuantificó que más de la quinta parte de los hogares elegibles no se inscribieron en el programa. Las cau
World Affairs Online
This paper investigates the relationship between workplace democracy and job flows (net job creations, gross job creations and destructions) by comparing the behavior of worker-managed firms (WMFs) and conventional firms. The empirical analysis relies on high frequency administrative firm-level panel data from Uruguay over the period April 1996-July 2009. The main findings of the paper are that (1) WMFs exhibit much more stable job dynamics than CFs; (2) both types of firms have decreasing in age and increasing in size gross job creation profiles; (3) there are heterogeneous employment regimes within WMFs: high job creation and destruction rates of hired workers and low job creation and destruction of members. This paper contributes to the literature on the role of institutions in shaping job flows. Our results may have important implications for the understanding of the allocative efficiency effects of worker participation.
BASE
In: World development: the multi-disciplinary international journal devoted to the study and promotion of world development, Volume 152, p. 1-26
World Affairs Online
SSRN
Working paper