Dismissal Laws and Innovation
By Krishnamurthy Subramanian, Viral Acharya
Book Edited by Asian Development Bank Institute
Citation
Subramanian, Krishnamurthy., Acharya, Viral. Dismissal Laws and Innovation Book Edited by Asian Development Bank Institute .
Copyright
Book Edited by Asian Development Bank Institute
Share:
Abstract
I theoretically and empirically show that dismissal laws -- laws that impose hurdles on firing of employees -- spur innovation and thereby economic growth. Theoretically, dismissal laws make it costly for firms to arbitrarily discharge employees. This enables firms to commit to not punish short-run failures of employees. Because innovation is inherently risky and employment contracts are incomplete, dismissal laws enable such commitment. Specifically, absent such laws, firms cannot contractually commit so ex-ante. The commitment provided by dismissal laws encourages employees to exert greater effort in risky, but path-breaking, projects thereby fostering firm-level innovation. I provide empirical evidence supporting this thesis using the discontinuity provided by the passage of the federal Worker Adjustment and Retraining Notification Act. Using the fact that this Act only applied to firms with 100 or more employees, I undertake difference-in-difference and regression discontinuity tests to provide this evidence. Building on endogenous growth theory, which posits that economic growth stems from innovation, I also show that dismissal laws correlate positively with economic growth. However, other forms of labor laws correlate negatively with economic growth and swamp the positive effect of dismissal laws.

K. V. Subramanian is a Professor of Finance (currently on leave) at the Indian School of Business (ISB). He has served as an Executive Director at the International Monetary Fund and was the 17th Chief Economic Advisor to the Government of India from 2018 to 2021.

As Chief Economic Advisor, Professor Subramanian conceptualised India’s economic policy during the once-in-a-century COVID-19 pandemic. By correctly identifying COVID-19 as a huge supply-side shock, Professor Subramanian balanced supply- and demand-side measures, transformed fiscal policy to focus on public capital expenditure, and initiated path-breaking reforms to address structural problems. His foresight and vision enabled the Indian economy to emerge with high growth and strong macro fundamentals despite the Ukraine war following the pandemic.

His policy ideas drew on the path-breaking Economic Surveys. He authored Ethical Wealth Creation for a Prosperous India (2019-20), a Strategic Blueprint for India to Become a $5 Trillion Economy (2018-19), and the post-COVID-19 economy using public capital expenditures in infrastructure and healthcare to further counter-cyclical fiscal policy (2020-21). Acknowledging his contributions, the Hon’ble Prime Minister of India, Shri. Narendra Modi, praised his “academic brilliance, unique perspectives on economic and policy matters, and reformatory zeal.”

Professor Subramanian has been conferred the Distinguished Alumnus award by both his alma maters at IIT Kanpur and IIM Calcutta. He holds a PhD from the University of Chicago. His research spanning banking, law and finance, innovation and economic growth, and corporate governance has been published in the world's leading academic journals.

Krishnamurthy Subramanian
Krishnamurthy Subramanian