Discussion paper

DP20224 When Protection Becomes Exploitation: The Impact of Firing Costs on Present-Biased Employees

Employment protection harms early-career employees without benefitting them in later career stages (Leonardi and Pica, 2013). We demonstrate that this pattern can result from employers exploiting naïve present-biased employees. Employers offer a dynamic contract with low early-career wages, an unattractive intermediate qualification stage, and high end-of-career wages. Upon reaching the qualification stage, present-biased employees exchange future wages for immediate rewards on an alternative career path – a choice unanticipated by their previous, naïve, self. Thus, employers never pay high future wages. Firing costs help employers indicate that they will not oust employees instead of making promised payments, enabling early-career wage cuts.

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Citation

Englmaier, F, M Fahn, U Glogowsky and M Schwarz (2025), ‘DP20224 When Protection Becomes Exploitation: The Impact of Firing Costs on Present-Biased Employees‘, CEPR Discussion Paper No. 20224. CEPR Press, Paris & London. https://cepr.org/publications/dp20224

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