Ageing and employability. Evidence from Belgian firm-level data

被引:0
|
作者
V. Vandenberghe
F. Waltenberg
M. Rigo
机构
[1] Central European University,Department of Economics
[2] IRES,Economics Department
[3] Economics School of Louvain (ESL),Departamento de Economia and Centro de Estudos Sobre Desigualdade e Desenvolvimento (CEDE)
[4] Université Catholique de Louvain (UCL),undefined
[5] Universidade Federal Fluminense (UFF),undefined
来源
关键词
Ageing; Old labour productivity and employability; Panel data analysis; J24; C33; D24;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
The Belgian population is ageing due to demographic changes, so does the workforce of firms active in the country. Such a trend is likely to remain for the foreseeable future. And it will be reinforced by the willingness of public authorities to expand employment among individuals aged 50 or more. But are older workers employable? The answer depends to a large extent on the gap between older workers’ productivity and their cost to employers. To address this question we use a production function that is modified to reflect the heterogeneity of labour with workers of different age potentially diverging in terms of marginal products. Using unique firm-level panel data we produce robust evidence on the causal effect of ageing on productivity (value added) and labour costs. We take advantage of the panel structure of data and resort to first-differences to deal with a potential time-invariant heterogeneity bias. Moreover, inspired by recent developments in the production function estimation literature, we also address the risk of simultaneity bias (endogeneity of firm’s age-mix choices in the short run) using (1) the structural approach suggested by Ackerberg et al. Structural identification of production functions. Department of Economics, UCLA, (2006), (2) alongside more traditional system-GMM methods (Blundell and Bond in J Econom 87:115–143, 1998) where lagged values of labour inputs are used as instruments. Our results indicate a negative impact of larger shares of older workers on productivity that is not compensated by lower labour costs, resulting in a lower productivity-labour costs gap. An increment of 10 %-points of their share causes a 1.3–2.8 % contraction of this gap. We conduct several robustness checks that largely confirm this result. This is not good news for older individuals’ employability and calls for interventions in the Belgian private economy aimed at combating the decline of productivity with age and/or better adapting labour costs to age-productivity profiles.
引用
收藏
页码:111 / 136
页数:25
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Ageing and employability. Evidence from Belgian firm-level data
    Vandenberghe, V.
    Waltenberg, F.
    Rigo, M.
    JOURNAL OF PRODUCTIVITY ANALYSIS, 2013, 40 (01) : 111 - 136
  • [2] Financial Constraints: State Aid to the Rescue? Empirical Evidence from Belgian Firm-Level Data
    Ilona Sergant
    Patrick Van Cayseele
    Journal of Industry, Competition and Trade, 2019, 19 : 33 - 67
  • [3] Financial Constraints: State Aid to the Rescue? Empirical Evidence from Belgian Firm-Level Data
    Sergant, Ilona
    Van Cayseele, Patrick
    JOURNAL OF INDUSTRY COMPETITION & TRADE, 2019, 19 (01): : 33 - 67
  • [4] Productivity and wage effects of firm-level upstreamness: Evidence from Belgian linked panel data
    Mahy, Benoit
    Rycx, Francois
    Vermeylen, Guillaume
    Volral, Melanie
    WORLD ECONOMY, 2022, 45 (07): : 2222 - 2250
  • [5] Agglomeration and productivity: evidence from firm-level data
    Martin Andersson
    Hans Lööf
    The Annals of Regional Science, 2011, 46 : 601 - 620
  • [6] Agglomeration and productivity: evidence from firm-level data
    Andersson, Martin
    Loof, Hans
    ANNALS OF REGIONAL SCIENCE, 2011, 46 (03): : 601 - 620
  • [7] Aid and growth: evidence from firm-level data
    Chauvet, Lisa
    Ehrhart, Helene
    JOURNAL OF DEVELOPMENT ECONOMICS, 2018, 135 : 461 - 477
  • [8] Bank Risk and Firm Investment: Evidence from Firm-Level Data
    Anastasiya Shamshur
    Laurent Weill
    Journal of Financial Services Research, 2023, 63 : 1 - 34
  • [9] Productivity and Wage Effects of Firm-Level Collective Agreements: Evidence from Belgian Linked Panel Data
    Garnero, Andrea
    Rycx, Francois
    Terraz, Isabelle
    BRITISH JOURNAL OF INDUSTRIAL RELATIONS, 2020, 58 (04) : 936 - 972
  • [10] An Ex-Ante Assessment of the AGI: Firm-Level Evidence from Belgian Tax Return Data
    Buyl, Pieter
    Roggeman, Annelies
    Verleyen, Isabelle
    CESIFO ECONOMIC STUDIES, 2022, 68 (01) : 46 - 72