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Do firms demand temporary workers when they face workload fluctuation? cross-country firm-level evidence

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Article

Dräger, Vanessa ; Marx, Paul

ILR Review

2017

70

4

August

942-975

employment security ; labour demand ; labour market ; short time working ; temporary employment

EU countries

Employment

https://doi.org/10.1177/0019793916687718

English

Bibliogr.

"The growth of temporary employment is one of the most important transformations of labor markets in the past decades. Theoretically, firms' exposure to short-term workload fluctuations is a major determinant of employing temporary workers when employment protection for permanent workers is high. The authors investigate this relationship empirically with establishment-level data in a broad comparative framework. They create two novel data sets by merging 1) data on 18,500 European firms with 2) measures of labor-market institutions for 20 countries. Results show that fluctuations increase the probability of hiring temporary workers by 8 percentage points in countries with strict employment protection laws. No such effect is observed in countries with weaker employment protections. Results are robust to subgroups, subsamples, and alternative estimation strategies."

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