Labor Laws and Innovation, ,
NBER Working Paper No. 16484 Stringent labor laws can provide firms a commitment device to not punish short-run failures and thereby spur their employees to pursue value-enhancing innovative activities. Using patents and citations as proxies for innovation, we identify this effect by exploiting the time-series variation generated by staggered country-level changes in dismissal laws. We find that within a country, innovation and economic growth are fostered by stringent laws governing dismissal of employees, especially in the more innovation-intensive sectors. Firm-level tests within the United States that exploit a discontinuity generated by the passage of the federal Worker Adjustment and Retraining Notification Act confirm the cross-country evidence. This paper is available as PDF (683 K) or via emailA non-technical summary of this paper is available in the April 2011 NBER Digest.
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Machine-readable bibliographic record - MARC, RIS, BibTeX Document Object Identifier (DOI): 10.3386/w16484 Published: “Labor Laws and Innovation” with Ramin Baghai and Krishnamurthy Subramanian, Journal of Law and Economics , 2013, 56, 997-1037. Users who downloaded this paper also downloaded* these:
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