Firms differ in their dependence on skilled labor, and face labor adjustment costs that increase with their workers’ skill level. We show that firms with a higher share of skilled workers, and thus less flexibility to adjust their labor demand in response to cash flow shocks, hold more precautionary cash. The effect of labor skills on cash holdings is more pronounced for financially constrained firms and varies with exogenous differences in firing and hiring costs. We address endogeneity concerns by using subsamples of firms with reasonably similar characteristics, propensity score matching, and a quasi-experimental shock to labor markets
In chapter 1, I quantify the economic value that firms of different productivity levels derive from ...
In the aftermath of the U.S. financial crisis, both a sharp drop in employment and a surge in corpor...
The role of skilled labor in the modern economy and its importance in explaining trends in wage ineq...
This paper investigates why labor specialization brings additional frictions to the labor market. Th...
This paper examines the role of labor leverage in determining cash held by companies on their balanc...
Firms consider wages, current and expected productivity as well as firing and hiring costs when firi...
Firms let their employees operate assets to produce goods and services. Firm-specificity of asset an...
What role does labor play in a firm’s market value? We explore this question using a production-base...
Shimer (2005) argues that a search and matching model of the labor market in which wage is determine...
A holdup problem on workers’ skill investment arises when employers can adopt discriminatory hiring ...
Firms adjust their employment to changes in output. But they tend to adjust it only partially. Typic...
We document that the firm level hiring rate predicts stock returns in the cross-section of US public...
Human capital investment is formed through households' endogenous decision, and competes with physic...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Wiley via the DOI in thi...
What determines the proportion of a firm’s income that workers receive as compensation? This paper u...
In chapter 1, I quantify the economic value that firms of different productivity levels derive from ...
In the aftermath of the U.S. financial crisis, both a sharp drop in employment and a surge in corpor...
The role of skilled labor in the modern economy and its importance in explaining trends in wage ineq...
This paper investigates why labor specialization brings additional frictions to the labor market. Th...
This paper examines the role of labor leverage in determining cash held by companies on their balanc...
Firms consider wages, current and expected productivity as well as firing and hiring costs when firi...
Firms let their employees operate assets to produce goods and services. Firm-specificity of asset an...
What role does labor play in a firm’s market value? We explore this question using a production-base...
Shimer (2005) argues that a search and matching model of the labor market in which wage is determine...
A holdup problem on workers’ skill investment arises when employers can adopt discriminatory hiring ...
Firms adjust their employment to changes in output. But they tend to adjust it only partially. Typic...
We document that the firm level hiring rate predicts stock returns in the cross-section of US public...
Human capital investment is formed through households' endogenous decision, and competes with physic...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Wiley via the DOI in thi...
What determines the proportion of a firm’s income that workers receive as compensation? This paper u...
In chapter 1, I quantify the economic value that firms of different productivity levels derive from ...
In the aftermath of the U.S. financial crisis, both a sharp drop in employment and a surge in corpor...
The role of skilled labor in the modern economy and its importance in explaining trends in wage ineq...