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Labour Hoarding during the Crisis: Evidence for selected New Member States from the Financial Crisis Survey

By: Stehrer, Robert.
Contributor(s): Leitner, Sandra M.
Material type: materialTypeLabelBookSeries: wiiw Working Papers: 84Publisher: Wien : Wiener Institut für Internationale Wirtschaftsvergleiche (wiiw), 2012Description: 17 S., 10 Tables and 1 Figure, 30cm.Subject(s): global financial crisis | labour hoarding | New Member States | firm level analysisCountries covered: New EU Member Stateswiiw Research Areas: Macroeconomic Analysis and PolicyClassification: G01 | C23 | D22 | J23 Online resources: Click here to access online Summary: During economic downturns, labour hoarding becomes an attractive human resource strategy if sizeable search and training costs render hiring and training new workers too costly. The paper sheds light on the prevalence and extent of labour hoarding in five New EU Member States and Turkey during the global financial crisis, which spread quickly like wildfire after the bankruptcy of Lehman Brothers in September 2008. It applies a unique firm-level panel, constructed by merging the World Bank Financial Crisis Survey (FCS) with the Business Environment and Enterprise Performance survey (BEEPs) and demonstrates that labour hoarding was a widely used strategy among entrepreneurs during the crisis. Furthermore, labour hoarding was particularly frequent among innovators whose substantial R&D-related training costs and extensive search costs for knowledgeable and experienced R&D personnel rendered labour hoarding more cheaply.
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Paper WIIW Library 5.700/84 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 1000010002632

During economic downturns, labour hoarding becomes an attractive human resource strategy if sizeable search and training costs render hiring and training new workers too costly. The paper sheds light on the prevalence and extent of labour hoarding in five New EU Member States and Turkey during the global financial crisis, which spread quickly like wildfire after the bankruptcy of Lehman Brothers in September 2008. It applies a unique firm-level panel, constructed by merging the World Bank Financial Crisis Survey (FCS) with the Business Environment and Enterprise Performance survey (BEEPs) and demonstrates that labour hoarding was a widely used strategy among entrepreneurs during the crisis. Furthermore, labour hoarding was particularly frequent among innovators whose substantial R&D-related training costs and extensive search costs for knowledgeable and experienced R&D personnel rendered labour hoarding more cheaply.

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