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Career Consequences of Firm Heterogeneity for Young Workers: First Job and Firm Size

Authors :
Arellano-Bover, Jaime
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Bonn: Institute of Labor Economics (IZA), 2020.

Abstract

I study the long-term effects of landing a first job at a large firm versus a small one using Spanish social security data. Size could be a relevant employer attribute for inexperienced workers since large firms are associated with greater training, higher wages, and enhanced productivity. The key empirical challenge is selection into first jobs – for instance, more able people may land jobs at large firms. I address this challenge developing an instrumental-variables approach that, while keeping business-cycle conditions fixed, leverages variation in the composition of labor demand that labor-market entrants face. I find that initially matching with a larger firm substantially improves long-term outcomes such as lifetime income, and that these benefits persist through subsequent jobs. Additional results point to mechanisms related to search frictions and better skill-development at large firms. Together, these findings shed light on how heterogeneous firms persistently impact young workers' trajectories.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.od......1687..b6fe7c72f9341143da8a153cb26815ad