The effects of partial employment protection reforms: evidence from Italy, by Diego Daruich, Sabrina Di Addario and Raffaele Saggio (NOV 2022)
We combine matched employer-employee data with firms’ financial records to study a
2001 Italian reform that lifted constraints on the employment of temporary contract workers
while maintaining rigid employment protection regulations for employees hired under
permanent contracts. Exploiting the staggered implementation of the reform across different
collective bargaining agreements, we find that this policy change led to an increase in the
share of temporary contracts but failed to raise employment. The reform had both winners and
losers. Firms are the main winners as the reform was successful in decreasing labor costs,
leading to higher profits. By contrast, young workers are the main losers since their earnings
were substantially depressed following the policy change. Rent-sharing estimates show that
temporary workers receive only two-thirds of the rents shared by firms with permanent
workers, helping explain most of the labor costs and earnings reductions caused by the
reform.
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