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Labour Turnover

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Title: Labour Turnover


1
Labour Turnover
  • What do we know?
  • CAED, Cardiff, Sept 2005

2
Motivation
  • Important
  • a big cost to firms/management issue
  • subject to state regulations many places
  • Large differences in turnover rates between
    different economies, subject to a policy
    discussion in EU about the impact of regulations
  • impact on
  • the functionning of the labour market
  • productivity, and profit of firms
  • Wage growth of individuals
  • The development of employer-employee data
  • Own work in the field

3
Overview
  • Models/theories for worker turnover
  • The amount of turnover
  • International Comparisons
  • The role of regulation
  • Own estimates
  • Where do workers go after separations?
  • What do workers get out of separations?
  • What are the overall costs when people loose
    their jobs and cant find new employment?
  • What is the impact on firms?
  • Do non-pecuniary factors play a role?

4
Theories for turnover
  • Parsons, 1977. A search model building on Stigler
    ( 1961, 1962), McCall (1970), Mortensen (1970b),
    Gronau (1971), Salop (1973), Nelson(1970),
    Parsons(1973). Learning Models Rothschild(1974)
    and De Groot(1968).
  • Factors of importance to the job searching
    worker
  • The distribution of wage offers
  • The cost of search
  • the explicit or implicit job duration
  • the workers state of knowledge of market
    conditions
  • the contracting terms
  • And for the employed worker
  • the work hours rigidity of his current job

5
Quit behaviour
  • The search model suggest that the wage rate
    becomes a policy instrument of the firm higher
    wages lower quits.
  • Salop, 1973,
  • Wages should raise in firms which find workers
    suddenly more valuable in order to reduce quits
  • A sudden increase in hiring costs higher wages

6
Layoff behaviour (Parsons)
  • Closely related to the theory on specific human
    capital, Oi, 1962, Becker, 1962, Rosen, 1968,
    Parsons, 1968 and Salop, 1973
  • Training costs are born by the firm and must be
    repaid by productivity gt w
  • Implications
  • Minor fluctuations in product demand are less
    likely to drive productivity below wages the
    higher level of spec HC
  • Firms should more readily lay off workers when
    unemployment is high because workers will be
    available for rehire temporary layoffs as an
    inventory function where the training investment
    is maintained state subsidy in many countries

7
Temporary layoffs
  • As a long run contract between the firm and the
    employee
  • the firm takes the main risk, but sometimes
    subsidized, Italy in one extreme and DK as
    another
  • Feldstein, 1975, Hamermesh, 198? and Jensen and
    Westergaard-Nielsen, 1990.
  • The premium to workers is a wage premium
  • But how to prevent workers from taking a better
    offer when times are good and jobs are plenty?
  • HRM methods comes into the picture bonding, job
    satisfaction, challenges on the job, training
    possibilities, career etc (to be discussed later)

8
Turnover over the business cycle according to
Parsons
  • Mild fluctuations in the separation rates cover
    larger fluctuations in the quit and the layoff
    rates, which are neg. correlated
  • Layoffs rise in years of recession
  • Quit rates fall in years of recession and
    increase in the upswing
  • Residuals do not vary

9
Summing up on Parsons
  • Search based models to explain quits,
  • quits are related neg. to wages
  • Specific HC theory to explain layoffs, room for
    HRM methods to explain retention
  • Layoffs neg related to spec HC, HC and tenure
  • Temporary layoffs are a consequence but also
    noise for the observer

10
Jovanovic, 1979 and 1984
  • Jovanovich combines a search model with a
    matching model to yield movements of workers from
    job to job and into and out of employment.
  • He uses the assumption that a workers contact
    with employers occur as a Poisson Process
  • In Jovanovic, 1984 he introduces three different
    reservation wages job-to-job, job-to-unemployment
    , and unemployment-to-job transitions.

11
J 2
  • Job to Job transitions
  • Main points are
  • After a worker has worked for a while, the worker
    will be willing to accept a job with a lower
    current wage, because now he knows the future
    wage trajectory
  • The job-to-job hazard rate decreases with w and
    increases with t. It is assumed that general
    skills, transferable across firms, are
    accumulated on the job.

12
J 3
  • Unemployment to Job transitions
  • The rate of movement from unemployment to
    employment is a constant .
  • This rate exceeds the job-to-job rate. This means
    that a worker has a bigger chance of getting a
    job while unemployed than when he is employed.
  • The constancy of the hazard rate reflects the
    assumed performance of unemployment insurance.
  • Job to Unemployment transitions
  • unemployment is something the worker can always
    have.
  • The job to unemployment hazard rate must
    initially increase. In his 1979 article he makes
    the same prediction and Flinn and Heckmann (1983)
    find that it does initially increase, but that it
    eventually declines.

13
Theories for quits and lay offs
  • Becker, Landes and Michael (1977)
  • Labour turnover is always efficient or joint
    wealth maximizing. The voluntary/involuntary
    distinction is inappropriate.
  • The firm and worker dissolve their match if and
    only if their total value as separated exceeds
    the combined value of the match. In this world,
    potentially inefficient separations results in
    wage adjustments or side payments to preserve the
    optimal assignments.
  • At some wage the firm would want to keep the
    worker, but the worker would choose to leave at
    a higher wage the firm would want the worker to
    leave but the worker would want to stay
  • In praxis If a worker asks for a wage increase,
    he does not get, he quits
  • If the worker refuses to accept a wage cut he is
    laid off.

14
Hall/Lazear
  • The idea Excessive layoffs in bad times and
    excessive quits in good times stem from the same
    weakness in worker-firm relations
  • The claim is that there are too many inefficient
    lay-offs and quits.
  • Too many (inefficient) layoffs occur when
    conditions are poor in the firm but even worse in
    the market
  • Too many (inefficient) quits take place when
    conditions in the market are good but even better
    in the firm

15
The difference between lay offs and quits
  • McLaughlins model (McLaughlins, 1991)
  • Quits are voluntary separations
  • Lay offs are involuntary separations
  • The classification depends on whether the demand
    for a wage revision is initiated by the worker or
    the firm
  • Separations are censored wage revisions
  • The worker knows his outside wage offer R but
    does not know his productivity with his incumbent
    employer.
  • Wages are governed by a counteroffer-matching
    contract
  • If productivity is exceeding the outside offer
    new pay is equal to the value of productivity, if
    not the worker quits, due to censored wage
    increase
  • If the firm observes that the worker productivity
    falls, initiates a wage cut, if the wage is below
    the value of productivity and the worker rejects
    it, there is a censored wage cut
  • This means that quits separate to higher paying
    jobs and layoffs to lower

16
McLaughlin 2
  • Wages are governed by a counteroffer-matching
    contract
  • If productivity is exceeding the outside offer
    new pay is equal to the value of productivity, if
    not the worker quits, due to censored wage
    increase
  • If the firm observes that the worker productivity
    falls, it initiates a wage cut, if the wage is
    below the value of productivity and the worker
    rejects it, there is a censored wage cut
  • This means that quits separate to higher paying
    jobs and layoffs to lower
  • Estimates a model with these features
  • Conclusion
  • Attempt to argue that the distinction between q
    and l is not meaningful
  • The estimates generally supports this model
  • The reason why we still distinguish between q and
    l it is useful in describing the conditions of
    the employment transition.

17
Monopsony
  • Manning, 2003, claims that it is meaningful to
    discriminate between quits and layoffs
  • The reason is that wages as in the Lazear/Hall
    model are fixed ex ante and not altered in
    response to shocks, there is rigidity, and it
    becomes meaningful to distinguish thus
    disagreeing with McLaughlin
  • Manning finds 15 points of evidence of monopsony
    on the labour market wage dispersion prevails,
    employer size effects, separation rates vary with
    wages, gender gap,

18
Definitions
  • Which measures Those, who were employed at
    establishment q in year t who were not employed
    at that establishment in year t1
  • Separations
  • Two sides of separations a third
  • if employers take the initiative lay offs
  • If employees take the initiative quits
  • Life turnover death, sickness, retirement,
    military service
  • In our case, we cannot distinguish!
  • Empirical question if we can trust answers
    employers and employees

19
International Comparisons, average tenure ordered
and median tenure
Source OECD, 1996
20
Skewness (as an indicator of the feasibility of
short employment spells?)
21
Regulation
  • Employment protection
  • No lay off possible
  • Layoff through legal process
  • Firing for wrong doing through labor court
  • Firing for wrong doing
  • Layoffs have to be negotiated
  • Mass layoffs have to be negotiated
  • Layoffs with long notice
  • Layoffs with short notice
  • Layoffs with no conditions
  • Compensation
  • No UI, bribing
  • Redundancy pay
  • Experience related UI
  • UI for layoffs
  • UI for all spells of unemployment

22
International Comparisons
  • In countries with regulation
  • Difference between mean and median is larger
    because there will be a number of people with
    short tenure and some with long tenure
  • more tend not to get a job at all. They will not
    even get a short tenure.
  • Low turnover means that firms are reluctant to
    hire
  • Employees are reluctant to move
  • Matches will tend to get a lower quality

23
Empirical studies of worker turnover
1Anderson Meyer, 2MarshallZarkin, 3Kidd,
4Parsons, 5 Pencavel
24
Other studies
  • A number of studies have shown
  • high worker and job turnover
  • (Davis Haltiwanger and Schuh, 1996), 19
  • (Albæk and Sørensen, 1998) and (Werwatz et al,
    1999) for DK, 30, /- for other industries.
  • job creation and destruction are obtained through
    a simultaneous hiring and firing process

25
Hypotheses on turnover over the cycles
  • Separations are changing between 27 and 33 in
    DK. Separations are lowest in low growth years,
    indicating that the low number of quits are
    dominating the increase in layoffs (also AM,
    1994)
  • Hires are highly procyclical (like AM, 1994)
  • The result is that youth and entrants are more
    vulnerable to business cycles

26
Hires and Separations (DK)
27
Separations over timethe coefficients in DK
28
Emperical prob that Person stays one add.
year, 5 more, or 10 more years Given tenure in
2000
Completed spells
Prob staying increaseswith tenure
29
The probability that a person stays 20years
given 5 years of tenureCompleted spells
30
Conclusions with respect to turnover
  • High
  • for low tenure
  • For young people
  • Some are still staying for long periods

31
What happens to people being separated from their
job?
  • (Where did they go? By Anders Frederiksen and
    NW-N, 2003) and Ibsen and NW-N, 2005)
  • The ideaFollow all job leavers into different
    destinations (Blanchard and Diamond, 1990)
  • Cyclicality, Personal characteristics (Anderson
    and Meyer, 1994)
  • Plant closures/conditions of previous employment
    (Gibbons and Katz, 1991)

32
Worker turnover where did they go?
33
Observation 1Where did people go?
  • Of 30 leaving a job between two years,
  • 20 get a new
  • 10 become unemployed or leave the labour force

34
Strategy
  • (in Ibsen and W-N, 2005)
  • 1. estimation of logit for getting immediate
    employment after separation
  • 2. estimate competing risk model for getting
    employment orleaving the labour force
  • 3. Data spell data, where we have followed each
    person week for week.

35
Probability that the person finds a job right
away, 1
36
2
37
Observation 2
  • Moving from declining industry is more difficult
    than moving from other industries because of loss
    of industry specific HC
  • A lemon effect? (Gibbons and Katz) a neg coeff.
    should be seen if person is leaving a growing
    firm
  • Person specific factors seem highly important

38
Hazard function for finding employmentgiven a
spell of unemployment
39
Hazards continued
40
What did we find?
  • There is a substantial job creation and
    destruction.
  • Newly created jobs require more education than
    destroyed jobs
  • The relation between job destruction and turnover
    12, but skew distribution
  • Of 30 leaving a job between two years,
  • 20 get a new
  • Industry/firm effects
  • Moving from declining industry is more difficult
    than moving from other industries because of loss
    of industry specific HC
  • A lemon effect? (Gibbons and Katz) to be seen if
    you are leaving a growing firm workers from
    closing plants are doing better
  • It looks like person effects are more important
    for the hazards moving out of unemployment and
    getting a job immediately after a separation than
    growth etc

41
Conclusions
  • Flows out of jobs and destinations are cyclical
  • The conditions of the work place matters for the
    probability getting the next job and matters for
    unemployment evidence for Lemons
  • Workers involved in job closures are more likely
    to get a job than others
  • Growing firms tend also to re-allocate more

42
A case The Danish Textile and clothing industry
  • Descriptive work
  • The decline of the textile industry in DK Late
    70s About 80,000 people employed in the textile
    and apparel industry
  • In 2000 there were 15,000 and the GDP
    contribution was larger
  • Similar but not as strong development in other
    European countries
  • Bjerring Olsen, Ibsen and W-N, 2003

43
Tentative conclusions concerning the closure of
the textile and clothing industry
  • Most of the adjustment has happened via lower
    accessions
  • Exits are not excessive
  • A large part of those made redundant in one
    establishment has found employment in other parts
    of the same firm
  • Exit destinations are of the same composition as
    other parts of the economy
  • Educational compostion of the work force has
    shifted
  • Young people with little education do not find
    their first job in textiles to the extent they
    used to!

44
The costs of turnover, where people do not find a
new job immediately
45
What do workers get out of moving job?
46
empirical studies on outcome of job mobility
  • Borjas NLSMM
  • labour turnover may lead to a significantly
    higher wage in the new job than in the old job,
    but
  • when they reach midlife the short run
    advantages of labour mobility are less important,
    leaving non-mobile men with significantly higher
    wage rates
  • The general result is that mobility increases the
    wage level -
  • Light and Garry estimate wage functions on NLSY,
    where mobility is an argument. Find that workers
    who undergo persistent mobility have lower
    log-wage paths than less mobile workers.

47
Jump between wage trajectories
C
B
A
48
Empirical strategy
  • Estimate wage functions for all employers
  • Wage function including firm specific element
  • Observing alternative wage offers?
  • Use the past pattern of mobility to limit the
    distribution of possible wage offers to employees
    of particular firm
  • Characterizing all wage trajectories by
    individual level, firm wage level, alternative
    wage, and the growth element of these concepts
  • Run probit on changing job or not with value of
    future job trajectories as explanatories.

49
Specific Theories for turnover
  • Human Capital approach (Becker, 1962 and Oi,
    1962)
  • highlights the inverse relationship between job
    mobility and the investments in job specific
    skills.
  • you could expect that job changes are associated
    with substantial wage gains

50
Personnel Policy
  • This model suggests that firms will use wages and
    employment conditions as policy instruments to
    retain people
  • What we find in Bingley and W-N, 2003.
  • The firm matches outside wage offers to key
    persons
  • Conditions for matching offers
  • highly productive/profitable workers
  • What keeps society on the edge of efficiency
  • Constraints from general concerns about internal
    wage distribution (Hall/Lazear model)
  • Too much mobility

51
Data
  • Privately employed, white collar, 20-59 years
    old, 1980-2001
  • CCP sample of all IDA (Danish Population)
  • Continuously employed deleted people with
    longer spells of unemployment
  • We observe 1827 big firms and numerous small
    firms (collapsed to 112 industries). No closures
  • Link between firms and employees Nov

52
Elapsed tenure since 1964
53
Probability moving
54
Immediate earnings gain
55
Wage gain distributions
56
Distribution of wage gains
57
Percentiles distribution, wage gain for stayers
58
Wage growth for movers
59
Wage concepts
  • Calculate
  • Person residuals Xb-w
  • Xb fe
  • Xb fe (tenure0) and fe is weighted
  • Change in person residuals
  • Change in Xb fe
  • Change in Xb fe
  • Hypotheses
  • A large person specific residual gives
    lower/higher prob moving
  • A firm, that pays more will have fewer moving
  • If competing firms are paying more, higher
    mobility
  • Fast track move less/more?
  • Fast wage growing firms have less movements
  • Fast wage growth in other firms will increase
    mobility

60
Results, firm random effects, probability of move
61
Conclusions
  • Shown that a credible but simple Human Capital
    model can actually contribute to explaining
    mobility.
  • Wage differentials play a key role in mobility
  • Shows some of the tools firms can use economic
    tools matter
  • Interesting to see if
  • Less wage compression in another country or over
    time makes a difference?
  • regulatory settings make a difference is there a
    higher threshold when regulations?

62
What are the costs to firms of turnover
  • Including firm and HRM characteristics

63
Firms perspective
  • The real cost of personnel changes are with
    respect to hiring
  • Bingley and W-N, 2003 show that cost of expanding
    with one employee can cost as much as 1/3 of a
    man year
  • Reducing the work force costs nothing when there
    is no redundancy pay
  • So why raid other firms?
  • If value of future productivity (incl costs of
    hiriring and recruiting gt future wage costs
  • General HC industry clusters

64
Arguments on worker tenure and turnover - demand
side
  • Turnover is good for a firm because it brings new
    ideas and new general human capital to the firm
  • High wage firms may be more selective in whom
    they retain.
  • Firms are more reluctant to lay off employees if
    they possess larger amounts of firm specific HC
    or OC
  • Firms may pay a high wage as a compensating wage
    differential for temporary employment or they may
    other benefits

65
Turnover and wage policy
  • large differences between firms regarding pay,
    25, Abowd, Kramarz and Margolis, 1999, BW-N,
    1998, Nikolaisen, 1998 on employer data.
  • Changes in remuneration systems create quits and
    different selection of new hires
  • Safelite Glass, Lazear, 2001
  • No relationship between wage growth and tenure at
    firm level, Barth, 1997
  • Higher wage level and higher wage growth reduce
    worker flows from mid size and large firms, Barth
    and Dale-Olsen, 1999
  • These and other studies are partial - either
    describing one firm or dealing with one
    relationship at a time.
  • Leonard and van Audenrode (1997) worker flows neg
    corr with profit
  • Leonard, Mulkay and van Audenrode (1999) higher
    productivity pos corr with profit and wage growth

66
Research strategies
  • Single firm or multiple firm studies?
  • Data availability is often the decisive factor
  • Gibbons and Waldman (1999)
  • "several of the existing findings come from a
    small number of studies ... and these studies
    typically focus on a very small number of firms.
    Before much more effort is expended on
    developing theories.. it is crucial to know which
    findings are specific to the particular firms
    studied and which are representative of careers
    in a range of occupations, industries, countries
    and time periods"

67
Personnel Policy and Profit by Bingley and W-N,
2003?
  • The novelty of this paper
  • relationship between wage level, wage growth,
    separations, hires and tenure and economic
    performance of the firm
  • we observe 7118 firms (all gt20 employees) in a
    country
  • Purely a statistical analysis
  • Factors, to be controlled for
  • characteristics of the work force, e.g. AGE
  • industry effects,
  • specific firm effects
  • Hard to control for exogenous shocks to the firm,
    even harder for single firms
  • endogeneity workplaces setting a high wage for
    other reasons may also retain workers and for the
    same reasons have a good performance - IV methods
    are needed

68
Equations
  • Profit function, where X is a matrix of exogenous
    firm characteristics, Y is endog. firm
    characteristics, epsilon ..
  • Instrumenting Y's by same X's and Z's (local
    labour market characteristcs)

69
Endogeneity
  • we need an instrument that determines (correlated
    with) the personnel policy and which does not
    determine firm performance
  • neighbouring labour markets are candidates
  • defined as the most popular home municipality
    outside the work municipality
  • the 2nd most popular.... the 3rd most......
    the 4th.........
  • the means of all firm characteristics in the
    municipality
  • unobserved firm specific factors - fixed effects
    estimation takes care of those - everything is in
    deviations from the mean
  • Or we have to call for experiments

70
Raw correlations
71
Estimation results, IV, fixed effects
Profit per worker in 1980 DKK
72
Results
  • Hires reduce profit - are costly - recruitment
    and hiring costs
  • Separations increase profit due to selection
  • this indicates that most separations are actually
    layoffs, where the employer has weeded out the
    least productive workers
  • Or separations make the remaining workers to work
    harder remember this estimate is only valid in
    a aproximity to the mean

73
Conclusion
  • Personnel policy has a strong relation to firm
    economic performance
  • More hiring is associated with lower profit
  • More separations are associated with higher
    profit
  • Shows that separations are not random but rather
    used as a management tool
  • Partly justification of the high turnover found
    in Denmark

74
Is it all pecuniary?
  • Studies on HRM and job mobility
  • Study on job satisfaction and turnover

75
HRM practices
  • HR-practices may have different impact on quits,
    examples
  • HR high-involvement practices selective hiring
    of people with high general skillsdesign of work
    to provide opportunities for individual
    discretion and ongoing learningongoing
    investment in training, high wages and
    perdormance management systems that build trust
  • High inverse relationship between
    High-involvement practices and quits
  • Firms less selective in hiring experience more
    quits (Arthur 1994, Shaw, Delery, Jenkins and
    Gupta, 1998)
  • The design of work through motivation (Hackman
    and Oldham, 1980)
  • Training, employment security, high relative pay
    are likely to induce employee attachment and
    commitment and is negatively correlated to quits
    (CottonTuttle, 1986, Shaw et al, 1998)
  • In customer-contact settings, high quit rates
    increase the costs of recruitment, but negatively
    affect sales

76
HRM hypotheses
  • High involvement HR-practices contributes to
    create a capable work force, long term employees
    are likely to be more productive and will be
    negatively correlated with quit rates
  • Employee quit rates will mediate the relationship
    between high-involvement human resource practices
    and sales growth

77
HRM-methods
  • Study of 326 similar call centers (R. Batt, 2002)
  • General managers surveyed (less optimistic than
    HRMs
  • Measuring high-HRM involvement
  • Survey, 3 indexes, additive
  • Skill level years of formal schoolingyears
    school ojt needed to become proficient
  • Work design employee collaboration in
    teamsindividual discretion
  • Involvement enhancing HR-incentives ongoing
    training, employment security, electronic
    performance monitoring
  • Quits excluded discharges, retirements,
    transfers and promotions
  • Results Coefficient in quit rate function skill
    index () work design-HR-incentives -.
  • Sales Growth function coeff to quits neg coeff.
  • Causality is an issue!

78
Job satisfaction and turnover
  • N. Kristensen and N.W-N, 2004, using ECHP-data in
    the EU-project Epicurus
  • Less satisfied workers are more likely to move
  • But even the satisfied do move
  • Side benefit the value of job security is found
    to be important in UK but job content is more
    important in DK.

79
Attempts to conclude
  • Turnover at national level varies a lot
  • Regulatory policies are different but outcome is
    not completely predictable firms and workers
    find other roads to optimize
  • We do not have a full understanding of the real
    costs to society but have a suspicion
  • Turnover varies a lot at enterprise level
  • Part is due to regulatory policies
  • Probably important for the efficiency of
    companies
  • Different levels of turnover calls for different
    HRM practices
  • Still a lot of uncharted land
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