Mobility, skills, and the Michigan non-compete experiment

Mobility, skills, and the Michigan non-compete experiment

0.00 Avg rating0 Votes
Article ID: iaor200968842
Country: United States
Volume: 55
Issue: 6
Start Page Number: 875
End Page Number: 889
Publication Date: Jun 2009
Journal: Management Science
Authors: , ,
Keywords: personnel & manpower planning, innovation
Abstract:

Whereas a number of studies have considered the implications of employee mobility, comparatively little research has considered institutional factors governing the ability of employees to move from one firm to another. This paper explores a legal constraint on mobility‐employee non-compete agreements‐by exploiting Michigan's apparently inadvertent 1985 reversal of its non-compete enforcement policy as a natural experiment. Using a differences-in-differences approach, and controlling for changes in the auto industry central to Michigan's economy, we find that the enforcement of non-competes indeed attenuates mobility. Moreover, non-compete enforcement decreases mobility more sharply for inventors with firm-specific skills and for those who specialize in narrow technical fields. The results speak to the literature on employee mobility while offering a credibly exogenous source of variation that can extend previous research on the implications of such mobility.

Reviews

Required fields are marked *. Your email address will not be published.