Does Raiding Explain the Negative Returns to Faculty Seniority?

Publisert i

Economic Inquiry 48 (3), 2010, pages 704-721

Sammendrag

We track faculty for 30 years at five PhD-granting departments of economics. Two thirds of faculty who take alternative employment move downward; less than one quarter moves upward. We find a substantial penalty for seniority, even after richly controlling for faculty productivity, and the penalty is little changed when we allow wages and returns to seniority to differ by mobility status. Faculty who end up moving to better or comparable positions were penalized as severely for seniority while they were in our sample as faculty who stay. These results are incompatible with the raiding hypothesis. Faculty from top 10 programs are also punished for seniority but to a lesser degree than other faculty, which could reflect reduced monopsony power against such faculty if they are more marketable. All results persist when we control for prospective publications and allow lower returns for older publications. Match-quality bias has dissipated in the post-internet period, which may be the consequence of greater availability of information.

Fulltekst

By Bernt Bratsberg, James F. Ragan Jr. and John T. Warren
Published June 21, 2011 3:17 PM - Last modified June 21, 2011 3:21 PM