Conference Agenda

Please note that all times are shown in the time zone of the conference. The current conference time is: 10th May 2025, 12:46:39am CEST

 
 
Session Overview
Session
CF 16: Inequalities in the labor market
Time:
Saturday, 24/Aug/2024:
9:00am - 10:30am

Session Chair: Merih Sevilir, Halle Institute for Economic Research and ESMT-Berlin
Location: Radisson | Melody


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Presentations
ID: 1877

Lehman’s Lemons: Do Career Disruptions Matter for the Top 5%?

Anastassia Fedyk1, James Hodson2

1UC Berkeley, United States of America; 2AI for Good Foundation, United States of America

Discussant: Melina Ludolph (Halle Institute for Economic Research (IWH))

How resilient are high-skilled, white-collar workers? We address this question by exploiting a uniquely comprehensive dataset of individual-level resumes of bank employees and the setting of the Lehman Brothers bankruptcy. The results reveal that the disruption had no effect on long-term career trajectories, except for senior employees. By 2019, former Lehman Brothers employees were 2% more likely to have experienced a break from employment and 2.5% more likely to have left the financial services industry than employees at other multinational investment banks—but these effects are driven exclusively by senior individuals, such as managing directors, and routine workers, such as secretaries. Analysts and associates experienced no adverse effects. Furthermore, in terms of subsequent career growth, analysts and associates from Lehman Brothers fared no worse than their counterparts at non-disrupted banks in terms of both (i) achieving high-ranking positions and (ii) the compensation of these subsequent positions. These results contrast with the extensive evidence of large, persistent negative effects of displacement on blue-collar workers, highlighting a novel aspect of income-related inequality.

EFA2024_1877_CF 16_Lehman’s Lemons.pdf


ID: 1416

Minding Your Business or Minding Your Child? Motherhood and the Entrepreneurship Gap

Valentina Rutigliano

University of British Columbia, Canada

Discussant: Tural Karimli (Frankfurt School of Finance and Management gGmbH)

Women are less likely than men to start firms and female entrepreneurs are less likely to succeed. This paper studies the effect of childbirth on women’s entrepreneurial activity. Drawing on rich administrative data from Canada and using

an event study and instrumental variable design, I show that childbirth has substantial negative effects on women’s founding rates and start-up performance, accounting for a large portion of the gender gap in entrepreneurship. The effects are

permanent: entrepreneurial outcomes never recover to their pre-birth levels. These

results are not fully explained by household specialization based on labor market

advantage. Childcare availability and progressive gender norms reduce the adverse

effect of childbirth on the entrepreneurship gap.

EFA2024_1416_CF 16_Minding Your Business or Minding Your Child Motherhood and the Entrepreneurship.pdf


ID: 1348

Careers and Wages in Family Firms: Evidence from Administrative Data

Vincenzo Pezone1, Raffaele Saggio2, Marco Pagano3, Edoardo Di Porto3

1Tilburg University, Netherlands, The; 2University of British Columbia, Canada; 3University of Naples, Italy

Discussant: Yongseok Kim (Tulane University)

We investigate the compensation policies of family and non-family firms using a novel employer-employee matched dataset, comprising the universe of Italian incorporated companies combined with information on their shareholders. Family firms pay significantly lower wages and offer slower careers. Half of their wage gap is accounted for by workers' time invariant characteristics, while the rest cannot be explained by differences in productivity or in non-monetary compensating differentials. The evidence is consistent with a model where family owners protect their control over the firm by creating a "glass ceiling" that limits workers' career progression, thus hindering their human capital accumulation.

EFA2024_1348_CF 16_Careers and Wages in Family Firms.pdf


 
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