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Employment Protection Reform in European Labor Markets: The Collective Bargaining Regime Matters

Francesco Palma and Yann Thommen
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Francesco Palma: Université de Strasbourg, Université de Lorraine

De Economist, 2020, vol. 168, issue 4, No 4, 575 pages

Abstract: Abstract Policy advisers repeatedly call on Western European countries to reform their employment protection legislation (EPL) by switching to a layoff tax model of unemployment insurance (UI) funding. This new design, partly based on the existing “experience-rating” (ER) system in the U.S., should induce firms to internalize layoff fiscal costs and hence reduce unemployment. However, its success remains uncertain in economies with a collective wage-setting system, as do those of many Western European countries. Using a matching model with endogenous job destruction, we provide an ex-ante evaluation of this policy reform’s effects on labor market outcomes and aggregate welfare in firm-level and sector-level bargaining economies. Our numerical analyses yield two main results. First, compared to simply increasing firing/dismissal costs, implementing an ER system improves labor market outcomes in both types of economies. Second, the design of the reform has to be adapted to the level of wage bargaining in the economy. Because firms can adjust most of the terms and conditions of employment (including wages) in decentralized negotiations, adding ER to existing EPL yields the largest reduction in unemployment under firm-level bargaining, while with sector-level bargaining, ER is better implemented with a relaxation of existing EPL. However, if the aim is to increase aggregate welfare, it is better under both bargaining regimes to relax existing EPL when implementing ER.

Keywords: Search and matching models; Collective bargaining; Experience rating; Employment protection (search for similar items in EconPapers)
JEL-codes: E10 J48 J50 J60 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2020
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DOI: 10.1007/s10645-020-09370-1

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