Description
Ramin Baghai (London Business School) presenting 'Wrongful Discharge Laws and Innovation' - Abstract: We show that wrongful discharge laws (laws that inhibit the common-law doctrine of employment-at-will) spur innovation. In our model, wrongful discharge laws make it costly for firms to arbitrarily discharge employees. This enables firms to commit to not punish short-run failures of employees and, thereby, encourage employees to exert greater effort in risky, but potentially mould-breaking, projects. We provide supporting empirical evidence using the staggered adoption of wrongful discharge laws across the U.S. states. Using difference-in-difference tests, we show that firms and employees in the affected states engage in greater innovation, measured by the number of patents led, citations to these patents, and the number of patents and citations per employee and per dollar of R and D expense. Using a novel dataset, we also document a 'creative destruction' in the affected states: we find more new firms being created and more existing firms being destroyed, with an increase in both job creation and job destruction.
Erwan Morellec (EPFL Lausanne) discussing Boris Nikolov on 'Agency Conflicts and Cash: Estimates from a Structural Model'
Published 01/15/12
Boris Nikolov (University of Rochester) presenting 'Agency Conflicts and Cash: Estimates from a Structural Model' - Abstract: We estimate a dynamic model of firm investment and cash accumulation to ascertain whether agency problems affect corporate cash holding decisions. We model four specific...
Published 01/08/12
Robert Hansen (Tulane University) discussing Laurent Fresard on 'Cross-Listing, Investment Sensitivity to Stock Price and the Learning Hypothesis'
Published 01/01/12