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Subsidy for the first hires and firm performance

Gert Bijnens, Sam Desiere (), Haotian Deng () and Bart Cockx
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Sam Desiere: Ghent University, Belgium

No 488, Working Paper Research from National Bank of Belgium

Abstract: This paper studies how employment subsidies for start-ups shape their performance. We exploit an unexpected policy reform in Belgium that permanently exempted start-ups hiring their first employee from payroll taxes for that employee. Using firm-level administrative data and a regression- discontinuity-in-time design, we find that subsidized post-reform start-ups employed fewer workers and generated lower output, value added, and profits compared to pre-reform start- ups. However, post-reform start-ups were more likely to survive as employers. These effects emerged within the first year after hiring and remained stable over a medium horizon of three years. Our findings indicate a compositional shift: the subsidy primarily induced low-productivity firms to enter the market. As most firms nowadays are nonemployers, our results meaningfully generalize the theoretical implications of standard neoclassical entrepreneurship models (employee–employer margin) and fill the important gap of the nonemployer–employer margin.

Keywords: entrepreneurship; start-up; employment subsidy; tax reduction; labor demand; small firms. (search for similar items in EconPapers)
JEL-codes: H25 J23 J24 J38 L25 L26 M51 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Pages: 48 pages
Date: 2026-03
New Economics Papers: this item is included in nep-ent and nep-sbm
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Working Paper: Subsidy for the First Hires and Firm Performance (2026) Downloads
Working Paper: Subsidy for the First Hires and Firm Performance (2026) Downloads
Working Paper: Subsidy for the first hires and firm performance (2026) Downloads
Working Paper: Subsidy for the first hires and firm performance (2026) Downloads
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