Works Councils and the Productivity Impact of Direct Employee Participation

ZEW Discussion Paper No. 03-47 // 2003
ZEW Discussion Paper No. 03-47 // 2003

Works Councils and the Productivity Impact of Direct Employee Participation

This paper measures the productivity impact of management-led participative establishment practices. On the basis of a representative German establishment data set, the IAB establishment panel, the study finds that the presence of team-work, a reduction of hierarchies and autonomous work groups in 1997 significantly increases average establishment productivity in 1997 – 2000. An endogeneous switching regression model takes the endogeneity of work councils into account and shows that the productivity effect can only be measured in establishments with works councils, i.e. employee induced participation. The estimation strategy controls for unobserved time invariant establishment heterogeneity by using a two-step system GMM panel regression approach. It simultaneously controls for endogeneity of participative work organization by using instrument variable regressions.

Zwick, Thomas (2003), Works Councils and the Productivity Impact of Direct Employee Participation, ZEW Discussion Paper No. 03-47, Mannheim.

Authors Thomas Zwick