2024/22 | LEM Working Paper Series | ||||||||||||||||
Digital Technologies, Labor market flows and Training: Evidence from Italian employer-employee data |
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Valeria Cirillo, Andrea Mina and Andrea Ricci |
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Keywords | |||||||||||||||||
Industry 4.0; Digital technologies; Hiring rate; Separation rate; Skills; Training; Employer-Employee data
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JEL Classifications | |||||||||||||||||
D22, L23, J21
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Abstract | |||||||||||||||||
New technologies can shape the production process by affecting the way
in which inputs are embedded in the organization, their quality, and
their use. Using an original employer-employee dataset that merges
firm-level data on digital technology adoption and other
characteristics of production with employee-level data on worker entry
and exit rates from the administrative archive of the Italian Ministry
of Labor, this paper explores the effects of new digital technologies
on labor flows in the Italian economy. Using a
Difference-in-Difference approach, we show that digital technologies
lead to an increase in the firm-level hiring rate – particularly for
young workers - and reduce the firm-level separation rate. We also
find that digital technologies are positively associated with
workplace training, proxied by the share of trained employees and the
amount of training costs per employee. Furthermore, we explore the
heterogeneity of effects related to different technologies (robots,
cybersecurity and IoT). Our results are confirmed through several
robustness checks.
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