We propose a simple theory suggesting that basic employmentprotection can improve economy-wide welfare as it mitigates a time inconsistency problem that makes a firm’s promise to workers less credible. By tilting the bargaining power in renegotiations on contract terms toward workers, basic employment protection can incentivize workers to invest in firm-specific human capital and allow firms to keep operating. This contrasts to the case of rigid labor protection, which forces firms to go bankrupt too often with economic costs. We test for the effects using a quasi-natural experiment: US workers gained basic protections between the early-1970s and the mid-1990s, but in years varying by state. We find employment protection to benefit the growth of knowledge-intensive industries. We corroborate another prediction that stronger bargaining powers of workers vis-à-vis other stakeholders since contemporaneous bank branch deregulations (i.e., reduction in banks’ monopoly powers) also benefit knowledge-intensive industries. Although labor and financial reforms are rarely jointly investigated, we confirm that the direct positive effect of basic employment protection prevails when correcting for (changes in) creditors’ powers and vice versa. Since the findings do not maintain for R&D-intensive industries, we interpret the firm-specific human capital in our theory broadly, as for white-collar jobs.
Basic Employment Protection, Bargaining Power, and Economic Outcomes Available to Purchase
We would like to acknowledge helpful comments of the editor and the referee of this journal, as well as Franklin Allen, Douglas Diamond, Adriano Rampini, Florencio Lopez-de-Silanes, Alex Monge, Martin Schindler, Katsuya Takii, Hajime Takizawa, Hajime Tomura, Robert M. Townsend, and Thierry Tressel. We have benefited from comments of participants at seminars at the IMF, RIETI, and the universities of Amsterdam, Hitotsubashi, Keio, Gakushuin, Tokyo, and Vienna, as well as the conference honoring the scholarship of Robert M. Townsend at the FRB Chicago and the University of Chicago, and several other conferences. We would also like to thank Liliya Repa and Mattia Landoni for their excellent research assistance. Earlier versions have been circulated under various titles since the authors were at the International Monetary Fund. This paper, especially theoretical study, is conducted as a part of the project “International Financial System and the World Economy: Medium and long-term issues” undertaken at the Research Institute of Economy, Trade and Industry (RIETI). This work is also supported by JSPS Kakenhi Grant Numbers JP16H02009 and the CARF research fund. The views expressed in this paper are those of the authors and should not be attributed to the Bank for International Settlements or any other institutions the authors have been affiliated with.
Claessens S, Ueda K (2020), "Basic Employment Protection, Bargaining Power, and Economic Outcomes". Journal of Law, Finance and Accounting, Vol. 5 No. 2 pp. 179–229, doi: https://doi.org/10.1561/108.00000045
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