1987
DOI: 10.1086/298138
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Employer Size: The Implications for Search, Training, Capital Investment, Starting Wages, and Wage Growth

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Cited by 229 publications
(149 citation statements)
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“…Barron et al (1985), Barron et al (1987) and Burdett & Cunningham (1998) study the determinants of employer search measures using the same data set as this paper. van Ours & Ridder (1992 and Abbring & van Ours (1994) analyze Dutch recruitment data and find evidence for simultaneous rather than sequential search by firms.…”
Section: Figure 1: Related Literaturementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Barron et al (1985), Barron et al (1987) and Burdett & Cunningham (1998) study the determinants of employer search measures using the same data set as this paper. van Ours & Ridder (1992 and Abbring & van Ours (1994) analyze Dutch recruitment data and find evidence for simultaneous rather than sequential search by firms.…”
Section: Figure 1: Related Literaturementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Baron et al (1987), Booth (1993), and Bassanini et al (2005) showed that training propensity is much greater among larger organizations since offering training courses to employees incurs fixed costs that are generally paid by the employer. Since large organizations are more likely to employ a larger number of treated workers, the total benefit of extra training courses to this group will also be larger and therefore they are better capable to meet the fixed costs of the training provided.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, for some of the firm level variables commonly used in the literature: firm size (see: Adams (1970); Schumacher and Baldwin (2000); Holtmann and Idson (1991); Brown (1990); Dunne and Schmitz (1995); Barron, Black, and Loewenstein (1987)) and `difficulty of the job' (Loewenstein and Spletzer (1999)) we found minuscule coefficients. The first result suggests that, once we control for differences in the organisational practices implemented in the workplace, firm size per se has a negligible effect.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 65%