Labor Representation in Governance as an Insurance Mechanism

Kim E. Han, Maug Ernst, Schneider Christoph


Abstract
We hypothesize that labor participation in governance helps improve risk sharing between employees and employers. It provides an ex post mechanism to enforce implicit insurance contracts protecting employees against adverse shocks. Results based on German establishment-level data show that skilled employees of firms with 50% labor representation on boards are protected against layoffs during adverse industry shocks. They pay an insurance premium of 3.3% in the form of lower wages. Unskilled blue-collar workers are unprotected against shocks. Our evidence suggests that workers capture all the gains from improved risk sharing, whereas shareholders are no better or worse off than without codetermination.

Keywords
Risk-sharing; Employment insurance; Worker representation on corporate boards



Publication type
Research article (journal)

Peer reviewed
Yes

Publication status
Published

Year
2018

Journal
Review of Finance

Volume
22

Issue
4

Start page
1251

End page
1289

Language
English

ISSN
1572-3097

DOI

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