Monthly Archive for July, 2011

The Labor Market Impact of Employer Health Benefit Mandates:

Evidence from San Francisco’s Health Care Security Ordinance

by Carrie H. Colla, William H. Dow, Arindrajit Dube  -  #17198 (HC HE LS)

Abstract:
A key issue surrounding employer benefit mandates is the incidence on workers through wages and employment.  In this paper, we address this question using a pay-or-play policy implemented in San Francisco in 2008 that requires employers to either provide health benefits or contribute to a public option health plan.  We estimate the impact on employment and earnings for the private sector overall, as well as for high impact sectors:  retail and accommodation and food services.

We develop a novel approach for individual case studies by combining both spatial discontinuity in policies and permutation-type inference using other MSAs.  We find that, compared to control counties, employment and earnings patterns in San Francisco did not change appreciably following the policy.  This was true for industries most affected by the mandate, as well as for overall private sector employment.  The results are generally robust to inclusion of different control groups, county-specific time trends, and varying pre-periods.  In contrast to the small effects on the labor market, we do find that about 25% of surveyed restaurants imposed customer surcharges, with the median surcharge being 4% of the bill.  These results indicate that while little of the burden of the mandate fell on San Francisco workers, approximately half of the incidence of the mandate fell on consumers.

http://papers.nber.org/papers/W17198

Negotiating with Labor Under Financial Distress

by Efraim Benmelech, Nittai K. Bergman, Ricardo Enriquez  -  #17192 (CF LS)

Abstract:

We analyze how firms renegotiate labor contracts to extract concessions from labor.  While anecdotal evidence suggests that firms tend to renegotiate down wages in times of financial distress, there is no empirical evidence that documents such renegotiation, its determinants, and its magnitude.  This paper attempts to fill this gap.  Using a unique data set of airlines that includes detailed information on wages and pension plans we document an empirical link between airline financial distress, pension underfunding, and wage concessions.

http://papers.nber.org/papers/W17192

Cohort Effects in Promotions and Wages: Evidence from Sweden and the US

Journal of Human Resources
ILLOONG KWON, Seoul National University
EVA MEYERSSON MILGROM, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR)
SEIWOON HWANG

Abstract

This paper studies the long-term effects of the business cycle on workers’ future promotions and wages. Using the Swedish employer-employee matched data, we find that a cohort of workers entering the labor market during a boom gets promoted faster and reaches higher ranks. This pro-cyclical promotion cohort effect persists even after controlling for workers’ initial jobs, and explains at least half of the wage cohort effects that previous studies have focused on. We repeat the same analyses using personnel records from a single US company, and obtain the same qualitative results.