Labor market regulations and firm adjustments in skill demand
利用意大利行政数据,研究一项旨在增加工作稳定性的改革如何意外地促使企业增加低技能永久员工的解雇并减少低技能固定期限合同的招聘,而对高技能工人无显著影响。
We study how changes in labor market regulations may trigger firm adjustments in skill demand. Leveraging rich administrative data from Italy, we investigate the effects of a reform that, to increase job stability, reduced the firing costs for permanent employees and tightened the regulation of fixed-term contracts. Using a difference-in-differences (DID) design, we document that the reform had unintended effects, inducing firms to increase layoffs of low-skilled (LS) permanent employees and reduce hires of LS workers on fixed-term contracts. However, the reform had no effect on high-skilled workers or permanent hires. A theoretical search and matching model with heterogeneous skills and contract durations makes sense of our main findings.