Publication | Closed Access
Profit-Sharing, Employment Stability, and Wage Growth
99
Citations
12
References
2001
Year
Human Resource ManagementEconomic GrowthIndustrial OrganizationProductivityEmployment StabilityManagementRemuneration PracticeEconomic AnalysisEconomicsWorkforce ProductivityNlsy DataWhite MenLabor EconomicsInternal Labor MarketWage InflationBusinessLabor Market ImpactEmpirical EvidenceUnemployment
The authors conjecture that profit-sharing reduces turnover and thus increases expected returns to firm-specific human capital investments, so that the optimal levels of skill acquisition and investment in firm-specific skills rise and ultimately increase productivity. Empirical evidence from NLSY data on white men in nonunion jobs between 1988 and 1994 supports this hypothesis. Employees participating in profit-sharing plans were less likely than non-participants to separate from their jobs. They also received training more frequently and for longer durations. Finally, the authors show that profit-sharing was related to higher wage growth, indicating a faster rate of skill accumulation.
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