Deadwood Labor: The Effects of Eliminating Employment Protection

Working Paper: NBER ID: w31797

Authors: Emmanuel Saez; Benjamin Schoefer; David G. Seim

Abstract: We study the role of employment protection legislation (EPL) in boosting employment among older workers. We do so by conducting a comprehensive analysis of the sharp and complete elimination of EPL that occurs at age 67 in Sweden, as well as reform-driven shifts in this age cutoff. First, focusing on direct separation effects, we find that 8% of jobs separate in response to the elimination of EPL. Effects stem from jobs with stronger initial EPL (long-tenure, firms subject to “last in, first out” rules), and those in the public sector. Separations appear involuntary to workers, with firms targeting plausibly unproductive workers (sick leave users). Second, we focus on effects on continuing jobs. While wages appear rigid to EPL elimination, we uncover novel, sizable intensive-margin hours reductions among continuing jobs, and an 8% drop in earnings conditional on staying on the job. Third, we estimate total equilibrium effects at the cohort level, where separations fully pass through into employment to population rate effects, with no offsetting effect from hiring. On a per-capita basis, total earnings of older-workers causally drop by 21.5% due to EPL elimination. We validate these local effects by leveraging a reform-driven shift in the age cutoff from 67 to 68. EPL is therefore a potential tool to prop up labor income among older workers, by prolonging the duration of their final job.

Keywords: employment protection legislation; older workers; job separations; deadwood labor; Sweden

JEL Codes: J0


Causal Claims Network Graph

Edges that are evidenced by causal inference methods are in orange, and the rest are in light blue.


Causal Claims

CauseEffect
EPL elimination at age 67 (J26)spike in job separations among older workers (J26)
EPL elimination at age 67 (J26)decline in total earnings of older workers (J26)
EPL elimination at age 67 (J26)reduction in working hours among continuing jobs (J22)
spike in job separations among older workers (J26)majority transition into retirement (J26)
EPL elimination at age 67 (J26)increase in deadwood labor (L73)

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