The effect of high dismissal protection on bureaucratic turnover and productivity
Metadatos:
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor/es:
Lombardi, María
Estrada, Ricardo
Fecha:
2022-06Resumen
We study the impact of high dismissal protection on bureaucratic turnover and productivity
in the context of public school teachers in Chile. We take advantage of a law that required education
administrators to grant a permanent contract to temporary teachers with at least three
consecutive years of experience in 2014. Using a difference-in-differences estimation, we first
compare the subsequent turnover of teachers with temporary contracts who had two and three
years of experience in 2010–2014. We find that on average high dismissal protection reduces
turnover by 25 percent in the first two years. The reduction in turnover is only statistically
significant among teachers at the bottom and top of the distribution of baseline performance.
We then examine the impact of dismissal protection on teacher productivity, and find a significant
decline in the learning of students taught by teachers with low baseline performance.
Together, these findings are consistent with the hypothesis that high dismissal protection can
be a double-edged sword. It can help to retain high-performing employees by increasing the
value of staying on the job, but at the cost of making it more difficult to separate and motivate
low-performing employees.
El 07/06/2024 se publicó la versión final de este artículo en el Journal of Human Resources Jun 2024, 0523-12901R2; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3368/jhr.0523-12901R2