Firing Regulations and Firm Size in the Developing World: Evidence from Differential EnforcementReview of Development Economics

By:
Rita K. Almeida, Z. Bilgen Susanli
Date:
  • Article Title: Firing Regulations and Firm Size in the Developing World: Evidence from Differential Enforcement
  • Title of Journal: Review of Development Economics
  • Vol #: 16
  • Issue #: 4

This article is included in a special issue of the journal which includes 11 articles focused on informality.

 

Abstract: This paper examines how stringent de facto firing regulations affect firm size throughout the developing world. A large firm level dataset is used across 63 countries and within country variation in the enforcement of the labor codes in countries with very different de jure firing regulations is explored. The findings strongly suggest that firms facing a stricter enforcement of firing regulations are on average smaller. This finding is interpreted as supportive of the fact that more stringent de facto firing regulations tend to reduce average employment. Robust evidence is found that this effect is stronger for more labor intensive manufacturing firms, especially those operating in low-technology sectors. Evidence also shows that this negative correlation does not hold in countries with a very weak rule of law.

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