Autores
M Diane Burton, Michael S Dahl, Olav Sorenson
Fecha de publicación
2018/10
Revista
ILR Review
Volumen
71
Número
5
Páginas
1179-1200
Editor
SAGE Publications
Descripción
The authors analyze Danish registry data from 1991 to 2006 to determine how firm age and firm size influence wages. Unadjusted statistics suggest that smaller firms paid less than larger firms paid, and that firm age had little or no bearing on wages. After adjusting for differences in the characteristics of employees hired by these firms, however, they observe both firm age and firm size effects. Larger firms paid more than did smaller firms for observationally equivalent individuals but, contrary to conventional wisdom, younger firms paid more than older firms. The size effect, however, dominates the age effect. Thus, although the typical start-up—being both young and small—paid less than a more established employer, the largest start-ups paid a wage premium.
Citas totales
201820192020202151369
Artículos de Google Académico
MD Burton, MS Dahl, O Sorenson - ILR Review, 2018