The Impact of Labour Market Policies on Productivity in OECD Countries

We investigate the impact of labour market policies on labour and multifactor productivity with industry-level data. First and foremost, labour market policies can influence average measured productivity through their impact on employment. Other things equal, employment growth tends to be associated...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Andrea Bassanini, Danielle Venn
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Centre for the Study of Living Standards 2008-09-01
Series:International Productivity Monitor
Subjects:
gdp
Online Access:http://www.csls.ca/ipm/17/IPM-17-bassanini.pdf
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spelling doaj-3c3e68d7dd9e4bb2840d55e4cd09892f2020-11-25T03:34:11ZengCentre for the Study of Living StandardsInternational Productivity Monitor1492-97591492-97672008-09-0117315The Impact of Labour Market Policies on Productivity in OECD CountriesAndrea Bassanini0Danielle Venn1OECD and University of Paris IIOECDWe investigate the impact of labour market policies on labour and multifactor productivity with industry-level data. First and foremost, labour market policies can influence average measured productivity through their impact on employment. Other things equal, employment growth tends to be associated with lower average measured labour productivity growth as more low-skilled workers enter the workforce. However, policies can also have sizeable direct effects on individual productivity levels and/or growth by creating incentives for workers to invest in training, facilitating reallocation of resources to their most productive uses and generating or maintaining high-quality job matches. We find that employment protection legislation, minimum wages, parental leave and unemployment benefits influence productivity through multiple channels, over and above their impact on employment levels.http://www.csls.ca/ipm/17/IPM-17-bassanini.pdfgdplabour market policiesmultifactor productivityemploymentproductivityoecd
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Andrea Bassanini
Danielle Venn
spellingShingle Andrea Bassanini
Danielle Venn
The Impact of Labour Market Policies on Productivity in OECD Countries
International Productivity Monitor
gdp
labour market policies
multifactor productivity
employment
productivity
oecd
author_facet Andrea Bassanini
Danielle Venn
author_sort Andrea Bassanini
title The Impact of Labour Market Policies on Productivity in OECD Countries
title_short The Impact of Labour Market Policies on Productivity in OECD Countries
title_full The Impact of Labour Market Policies on Productivity in OECD Countries
title_fullStr The Impact of Labour Market Policies on Productivity in OECD Countries
title_full_unstemmed The Impact of Labour Market Policies on Productivity in OECD Countries
title_sort impact of labour market policies on productivity in oecd countries
publisher Centre for the Study of Living Standards
series International Productivity Monitor
issn 1492-9759
1492-9767
publishDate 2008-09-01
description We investigate the impact of labour market policies on labour and multifactor productivity with industry-level data. First and foremost, labour market policies can influence average measured productivity through their impact on employment. Other things equal, employment growth tends to be associated with lower average measured labour productivity growth as more low-skilled workers enter the workforce. However, policies can also have sizeable direct effects on individual productivity levels and/or growth by creating incentives for workers to invest in training, facilitating reallocation of resources to their most productive uses and generating or maintaining high-quality job matches. We find that employment protection legislation, minimum wages, parental leave and unemployment benefits influence productivity through multiple channels, over and above their impact on employment levels.
topic gdp
labour market policies
multifactor productivity
employment
productivity
oecd
url http://www.csls.ca/ipm/17/IPM-17-bassanini.pdf
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