Family firms and the labor productivity controversy: A distributional analysis of varying labor productivity gaps

被引:4
|
作者
Creemers, Sarah [1 ,4 ]
Peeters, Ludo [4 ]
Castillo, Juan Luis Quiroz [2 ,3 ]
Vancauteren, Mark [1 ,4 ]
Voordeckers, Wim [4 ]
机构
[1] Stat Netherlands, The Hague, Netherlands
[2] Autonomous Univ Madrid, ECONRES Res Grp, Madrid, Spain
[3] Univ Adolfo Ibanez, CEPR, Penalolen, Chile
[4] Hasselt Univ, Hasselt, Belgium
关键词
Family firms; Labor productivity; Unconditional quantile regression; Blinder-Oaxaca decomposition; HUMAN-RESOURCE MANAGEMENT; SOCIOEMOTIONAL WEALTH; BEHAVIORAL AGENCY; OWNERSHIP; PERFORMANCE; REGRESSION; INNOVATION; ALTRUISM; DECISION; IMPACT;
D O I
10.1016/j.jfbs.2022.100515
中图分类号
F [经济];
学科分类号
02 ;
摘要
The question of whether family firms have a higher or lower labor productivity than nonfamily firms has led to a stream of inconsistent evidence. We address this polarized debate by arguing that the idiosyncratic workforce characteristics combined with the dual (socioemotional versus financial) wealth concerns of family firms may differ across the labor productivity distribution, which has a varying impact on the labor productivity differences of family firms versus nonfamily firms. Therefore, we use the method of unconditional quantile regression in our empirical testing on a rich data set containing firm-level data from a national survey of nearly 6,400 Chilean businesses, which allows us to account for the heterogeneous behavior of family firms throughout the entire labor productivity distribution rather than to focus on the difference in mean productivities merely. In line with our theoretical arguments, we find that family ownership generates a productivity advantage for firms located in the lower tail of the labor productivity distribution, whereas it exhibits a negative effect on labor productivity in the upper tail compared to their nonfamily counterparts. Our findings are robust to potential endogeneity of family ownership and offer a reconciling perspective on the contrasting labor-related agency and stewardship arguments dominating the labor productivity debate in family firms so far by showing which argument dominates depending on where the firm is located on the labor productivity distribution.
引用
收藏
页数:15
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] The Impact of Incentive Compensation on Labor Productivity in Family and Nonfamily Firms
    Chrisman, James J.
    Devaraj, Srikant
    Patel, Pankaj C.
    [J]. FAMILY BUSINESS REVIEW, 2017, 30 (02) : 119 - 136
  • [2] Family Involvement in Middle Management and Its Impact on the Labor Productivity of Family Firms
    Hu, Qiongjing
    Zhang, Yanlong
    Yao, Jingjing
    [J]. MANAGEMENT AND ORGANIZATION REVIEW, 2018, 14 (02) : 249 - 274
  • [3] Distributional effects of the increasing heat incidence on labor productivity
    Zhang, Jingfang
    Malikov, Emir
    Miao, Ruiqing
    [J]. JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL ECONOMICS AND MANAGEMENT, 2024, 125
  • [4] Labor productivity growth in Greek manufacturing firms
    Theodore Papadogonas
    Fotini Voulgaris
    [J]. Operational Research, 2005, 5 (3) : 459 - 472
  • [5] SMITH,ADAM AND THE HUMANISTS - AN INQUIRY INTO THE PRODUCTIVITY OF LABOR CONTROVERSY
    BOUCHER, TO
    [J]. IIE TRANSACTIONS, 1988, 20 (01) : 73 - 82
  • [6] Integral Analysis of Labor Productivity
    Czumanski, T.
    Loedding, H.
    [J]. 45TH CIRP CONFERENCE ON MANUFACTURING SYSTEMS 2012, 2012, 3 : 55 - 60
  • [7] LABOR PRODUCTIVITY
    Deryabin, V. S.
    [J]. TOMSK STATE UNIVERSITY JOURNAL, 2009, (319): : 138 - +
  • [8] The gender labor productivity gap across informal firms
    Islam, Asif M.
    Amin, Mohammad
    [J]. WORLD DEVELOPMENT, 2023, 167
  • [9] Labor misallocation and productivity growth in Vietnamese manufacturing firms
    Nguyen, Phuong Thi
    Nguyen, Hung Viet
    Ha, Hoa Quynh
    [J]. INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF SOCIAL ECONOMICS, 2023, 50 (04) : 537 - 555
  • [10] The relationship between labor productivity and number of operating firms
    Goksel, Turkmen
    Ozturkler, Harun
    [J]. JOURNAL OF INTERNATIONAL TRADE & ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT, 2021, 30 (06): : 818 - 828