Fast Track: Is it in the Genes? The Promotion Policy of a Large Japanese Firm
Kenn Ariga,
Giorgio Brunello and
Yasushi Ohkusa
No 1622, CEPR Discussion Papers from Centre for Economic Policy Research
Abstract:
This paper studies the promotion policy of a large, hi-tech manufacturing Japanese firm. We find that the company has multiple ports of entry and hires a significant number of employees with previous job experience. In addition, cohort-peer differentiation in promotion starts much earlier than predicted by the common view, and there are clear signs of fast-track effects, so that individuals promoted faster earlier are more likely to be promoted faster later on. Fast-track effects are not in the genes, because they survive even after controlling for time-invariant individual effects, such as innate individual ability. The last result is difficult to justify using a pure learning model, where ability is time invariant, so that a richer learning model, incorporating, say, human capital considerations, is clearly required.
Keywords: Internal Labour Market; Japanese firms; Promotion Policy (search for similar items in EconPapers)
JEL-codes: J4 L2 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 1997-04
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Journal Article: Fast track: is it in the genes? The promotion policy of a large Japanese firm (1999) 
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