Traditional models of promotion have difficulty explaining why many firms do not favor internal employees for advancement. I develop a new model to explain this phenomenon. My model generates an equilibrium where some, but not all, ex ante identical firms recruit strictly internally. These firms employ higher quality entry-level workers, since they hire supervisors exclusively from their lower ranks. The scarcity of high-quality workers limits the use of this strategy. I derive several testable predictions on wage-tenure profile differences across firms with varying recruitment practices and confirm these predictions using matched employer-employee data from the United Kingdom
Firms’ organizational structures impose constraints on their ability to use promotion-based incentiv...
According to the previous literature on hiring, ?rms face a trade-off when deciding on external recr...
We develop a model of monopsonistic wage competition with heterogenous worker ability and intra-firm...
Traditional models of promotion have difficulty explaining why many firms do not favor internal empl...
Traditional models of promotion have difficulty explaining why many firms do not favor internal empl...
Traditional models of promotion have difficulty explaining why many firms do not favor internal empl...
We select one firm from a large data set of firms and study its internal economics. First we prove t...
We select one firm from a large data set of firms and study its internal economics. First we prove t...
We select one firm from a large data set of firms and study its internal economics. First we prove t...
Based on a rich personnel data set of a large university we .nd strong evidence for the existence of...
This paper presents a theoretical and empirical analysis of this decision and how it relates to wage...
We attempt to explain employment practices in internal labor markets using models that combine job a...
Based on a rich personnel data set of a large university we .nd strong evidence for the existence of...
This paper considers an equilibrium search model, where firms use information on a worker's labour m...
Firms’ organizational structures impose constraints on their ability to use promotion-based incentiv...
Firms’ organizational structures impose constraints on their ability to use promotion-based incentiv...
According to the previous literature on hiring, ?rms face a trade-off when deciding on external recr...
We develop a model of monopsonistic wage competition with heterogenous worker ability and intra-firm...
Traditional models of promotion have difficulty explaining why many firms do not favor internal empl...
Traditional models of promotion have difficulty explaining why many firms do not favor internal empl...
Traditional models of promotion have difficulty explaining why many firms do not favor internal empl...
We select one firm from a large data set of firms and study its internal economics. First we prove t...
We select one firm from a large data set of firms and study its internal economics. First we prove t...
We select one firm from a large data set of firms and study its internal economics. First we prove t...
Based on a rich personnel data set of a large university we .nd strong evidence for the existence of...
This paper presents a theoretical and empirical analysis of this decision and how it relates to wage...
We attempt to explain employment practices in internal labor markets using models that combine job a...
Based on a rich personnel data set of a large university we .nd strong evidence for the existence of...
This paper considers an equilibrium search model, where firms use information on a worker's labour m...
Firms’ organizational structures impose constraints on their ability to use promotion-based incentiv...
Firms’ organizational structures impose constraints on their ability to use promotion-based incentiv...
According to the previous literature on hiring, ?rms face a trade-off when deciding on external recr...
We develop a model of monopsonistic wage competition with heterogenous worker ability and intra-firm...