Joint research unit 7235

Bankruptcy and the difficulty of firing

Nicolae Stef

Firms may use layoffs as an ex ante mechanism to avoid filing for bankruptcy. However, the national labor law may impose some restrictions that delay or hamper the firing decision of the employer. This study proposes a different legal pathway for policymakers whose goal is to reduce the use of bankruptcy without acting on the design of the bankruptcy law. Using a sample of 33 countries from 2007 to 2015, we show that the total amount of firing restrictions leads to more bankruptcies. The employer’s legal obligation to notify a third party prior the dismissal of one employee tends to increase the number of bankruptcies. It is very likely that the employer’s rescue strategy endures an intense ex post monitoring of the employment contracts and/or a strong legal opposition to the layoff decision from such third party. In addition, labor codes that apply priority rules in case of reemployment can increase the use of bankruptcy.

AGENDA

Thursday 8 June 2023

Doctorants

Sahil Chopra (Université Sorbonne Paris-Nord)

Economics of litigation : Securities class action with third-party funding

Thursday 8 June 2023

Economics of litigation : Securities class action with third-party funding

Sahil Chopra (Université Sorbonne Paris-Nord)

Economics of litigation : Securities class action with third-party funding

Monday 12 June 2023

Law, Institutions and Economics in Nanterre (LIEN)

Arthur Silve (IAST / Univ. Laval)

TBA

Monday 12 June 2023

TBA

Arthur Silve (IAST / Univ. Laval)

TBA

Thursday 15 June 2023

Lunch

Guillaume Pierné

TBA

Thursday 15 June 2023

TBA

Guillaume Pierné

TBA

Monday 19 June 2023

Law, Institutions and Economics in Nanterre (LIEN)

Juan Mora-Sanguinetti (Banco de Espana)

TBA

Monday 19 June 2023

TBA

Juan Mora-Sanguinetti (Banco de Espana)

TBA

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