Using matched firm-worker data from Danish manufacturing, we observe firm-to-firm worker movements and find that firms that hired workers from more productive firms experience productivity gains one year after the hiring. The productivity gains associated with hiring from more productive firms are equivalent to 0.35 percent per year for an average firm. Surviving a variety of statistical controls, these gains increase with education, tenure, and skill level of new hires, persist for several years after the hiring was done, and remain broadly similar for different industries and measures of productivity. Competing explanations for these gains, knowledge spillovers in particular, are discussed
Private sector R&D is largely concentrated in a few multinational companies (MNCs). The mobility...
An employer-employee panel is used to study whether the movement of workers across firms is a channe...
A prominent feature of the economic landscape in the most developed countries is the tendency for fi...
Using matched firm-worker data from Danish manufacturing, we observe firm-to-firm worker movements a...
This article focuses on the phenomenon of interfirm labor mobility as a potential channel for knowle...
Abstract of associated article: Knowledge spillovers through worker mobility between firms, found in...
International audienceThis article focuses on the phenomenon of interfirm labor mobility as a potent...
This paper addresses the link between productivity and labour mobility. The hypothesis tested in the...
Does hiring workers with experience from multinationals (MNEs) increase productivity in non-MNEs? Tr...
This paper documents labor mobility flows from multinationals (MNEs) to non-MNEs in Norwegian manufa...
While there has been a large empirical literature on productivity spillovers from foreign to domesti...
An employer-employee panel is used to study whether the movement of workers across firms is a channe...
This paper documents the extent of labour mobility from multinationals (MNEs) to non-MNEs in Norweg...
Potential productivity spillovers from foreign direct investment (FDI) often provide a rationale for...
Using a 16-year employer–employee panel dataset that contains the entire population of firms and wor...
Private sector R&D is largely concentrated in a few multinational companies (MNCs). The mobility...
An employer-employee panel is used to study whether the movement of workers across firms is a channe...
A prominent feature of the economic landscape in the most developed countries is the tendency for fi...
Using matched firm-worker data from Danish manufacturing, we observe firm-to-firm worker movements a...
This article focuses on the phenomenon of interfirm labor mobility as a potential channel for knowle...
Abstract of associated article: Knowledge spillovers through worker mobility between firms, found in...
International audienceThis article focuses on the phenomenon of interfirm labor mobility as a potent...
This paper addresses the link between productivity and labour mobility. The hypothesis tested in the...
Does hiring workers with experience from multinationals (MNEs) increase productivity in non-MNEs? Tr...
This paper documents labor mobility flows from multinationals (MNEs) to non-MNEs in Norwegian manufa...
While there has been a large empirical literature on productivity spillovers from foreign to domesti...
An employer-employee panel is used to study whether the movement of workers across firms is a channe...
This paper documents the extent of labour mobility from multinationals (MNEs) to non-MNEs in Norweg...
Potential productivity spillovers from foreign direct investment (FDI) often provide a rationale for...
Using a 16-year employer–employee panel dataset that contains the entire population of firms and wor...
Private sector R&D is largely concentrated in a few multinational companies (MNCs). The mobility...
An employer-employee panel is used to study whether the movement of workers across firms is a channe...
A prominent feature of the economic landscape in the most developed countries is the tendency for fi...