Morten Henningsen and Torbjørn Hægeland ()
Additional contact information
Torbjørn Hægeland: Statistics Norway
Abstract: Employers cannot always displace workers at their own discretion. In many countries, Employment Protection Legislation (EPL) includes restrictions on laying off workers. This paper studies whether employers use downsizing events, where the rules for dismissal differ from the rules that apply for individual dismissal, to displace workers selectively. We investigate empirically whether workers with low expected productivity relative to co-workers face particularly high exit risks when establishments downsize. Our evidence is consistent with establishments using downsizings as a sorting device to terminate the employment of the least profitable workers who are protected against dismissal under normal times of operation. However, only a minor share of the displacements in downsizings may be attributed to opportunistic sorting by employers, suggesting that EPL may not be an important obstacle to firms' firing of individual workers.
Keywords: Downsizing; sickness absence; employment protection
JEL-codes: I18; J63; J65 May 2008
Full text files
dp543.pdf
Questions (including download problems) about the papers in this series should be directed to L Maasø ()
Report other problems with accessing this service to Sune Karlsson ().
RePEc:ssb:dispap:543This page generated on 2024-10-30 04:36:24.