Theory presents two broad channels through which profit sharing can increase worker training. First, it directly increases training by alleviating hold-up problems and/or by encouraging co-workers to provide training. Second, it indirectly increases training by reducing worker separation and increasing training investments' amortization period. This article provides the first attempt at separately identifying these two channels. We confirm a strong direct effect, but also identify a weaker, more tenuous indirect effect. This suggests that profit sharing's influence on training is unlikely to operate primarily through its reduction on separations while simultaneously presenting the first evidence confirming the prediction of an indirect caus...
Using data from the British Household Panel Survey for the years 1998-2005, this study estimates the...
Although the transfer of on-the-job training to the workplace belongs to the realm of educational re...
Standard economic theory predicts that firms will not invest in general training and will underinves...
We test the theoretical prediction that profit sharing reduces worker separations and by doing so in...
We analyze the impact of profit sharing on the share of workers receiving training. An effect is pla...
This article investigates whether paying a profit-related wage stimulates training investments. The ...
This article investigates whether paying a profit-related wage stimulates training investments. The ...
Market imperfections may cause firms and workers to under-invest in specific training. This paper sh...
Kruse details the reasons profit sharing plans are implemented and the systemic factors within firms...
This paper offers and tests a theory of training whereby workers do not pay for general training the...
This paper summarizes new evidence from the “Shared Capitalism” Project on the extent to which worke...
Standard economic theory predicts that firms will not invest in general training and will underinves...
"This paper uses data from two British workplace surveys to examine the impact of unions on several ...
This paper presents evidence that during the first year or so of a worker\u27s tenure, wages rise mo...
We investigate two dimensions of investment in general human capital on-the-job: the number of worke...
Using data from the British Household Panel Survey for the years 1998-2005, this study estimates the...
Although the transfer of on-the-job training to the workplace belongs to the realm of educational re...
Standard economic theory predicts that firms will not invest in general training and will underinves...
We test the theoretical prediction that profit sharing reduces worker separations and by doing so in...
We analyze the impact of profit sharing on the share of workers receiving training. An effect is pla...
This article investigates whether paying a profit-related wage stimulates training investments. The ...
This article investigates whether paying a profit-related wage stimulates training investments. The ...
Market imperfections may cause firms and workers to under-invest in specific training. This paper sh...
Kruse details the reasons profit sharing plans are implemented and the systemic factors within firms...
This paper offers and tests a theory of training whereby workers do not pay for general training the...
This paper summarizes new evidence from the “Shared Capitalism” Project on the extent to which worke...
Standard economic theory predicts that firms will not invest in general training and will underinves...
"This paper uses data from two British workplace surveys to examine the impact of unions on several ...
This paper presents evidence that during the first year or so of a worker\u27s tenure, wages rise mo...
We investigate two dimensions of investment in general human capital on-the-job: the number of worke...
Using data from the British Household Panel Survey for the years 1998-2005, this study estimates the...
Although the transfer of on-the-job training to the workplace belongs to the realm of educational re...
Standard economic theory predicts that firms will not invest in general training and will underinves...