The impact of restricting labor mobility on corporate investment and entrepreneurship
Authors | Jeffers |
Year | 2021 |
Type | Working Paper |
Abstract | This paper examines how labor frictions affect investment rate and new firm entry. Using matched employee-employer data from LinkedIn, I first show that increases in the enforceability of non-compete agreements lead to widespread declines in employee departures across seniority levels, driven by workers in knowledge-intensive occupations. Investment rates at existing firms increase, especially for firms that employ more skilled workers. This comes at the expense of new firm entry, which declines substantially in knowledge-intensive sectors. The results suggest that labor frictions play an important role in investment decisions, and that NCs may factor into slowing business dynamism. |
Keywords | Labor mobility, entrepreneurship, investment, non-competes, human capital |
URL | https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=3040393 |
Tags | Archival Empirical | Investment Decisions (Institutional) | Manager / Firm Behavior | Media and Textual Analysis |