Recent Canadian Evidence on Job Quality by Firm Size - ARCHIVED
Articles and reports: 11F0019M1998128
We provide recent evidence on job characteristics by firm size in Canada. Using a variety of household surveys, we assemble a wide set of facts on wages, fringe benefits and work schedules in small and large firms. We show that the wage gap between small and large firms has reamined fairly stable over the past decade. After controlling for observable worker characteristics and industry-specific effects, large firms pay 15-20% more than small firms. Pension plan coverage remains at least four times higher in large firms than in small firms. While the gap in pension coverage between small and large firms has not increased over time for men, there is some evidence that it has increased for women. We assess the extent to which work schedules vary between small and large firms. Our results indicate that compared to workers in large firms, employees of small firms work at least as many weekly hours. Furthermore, they are more likely to work more than five days per week. This implies that the firm size wage premium cannot be explained by a longer workweek in large firms. As long as workers prefer working during the day, the greater frequency of shift work in large, goods-producing companies is one dimension along which work schedules are less desirable in large firms. According to the theory of compensating differentials, the size-wage differential may partially reflect the willingness of large firms to compensate workers for shift work. We test this hypothesis and conclude that shift work has virtually no effect on the firm size wage premium. Our results emphasize the need to look at several dimensions of work to assess how job quality varies between small and large firms.
Main Product: Analytical Studies Branch Research Paper Series
Format | Release date | More information |
---|---|---|
November 13, 1998 |
Related information
Related products
Analysis
- Articles and reports: An Explanation of the Increasing Age Premium
- Articles and reports: Are There High-tech Industries or Only High-tech Firms? Evidence from New Technology-based Firms
- Articles and reports: Computers, Fax Machines and Wages in Canada: What Really Matters?
- Articles and reports: Employment Insurance in Canada: Recent Trends and Policy Changes
- Articles and reports: Foreign-born vs Native-born Canadians: A Comparison of Their Inter-provincial Labour Mobility
- Articles and reports: Living Arrangements and Residential Overcrowding: The Situation of Older Immigrants in Canada, 1991
- Articles and reports: New Views on Inequality Trends in Canada and the United States
- Articles and reports: Technology Adoption: A Comparison Between Canada and the United States
- Articles and reports: The Determinants of the Adoption Lag for Advanced Manufacturing Technologies
- Articles and reports: The Effect of Technology and Trade on Wage Differentials Between Nonproduction and Production Workers in Canadian Manufacturing
- Articles and reports: The Intergenerational Earnings and Income Mobility of Canadian Men: Evidence from Longitudinal Income Tax Data
- Articles and reports: What is Happening to Earnings, Inequality and Youth Wages in the 1990s?
Subjects and keywords
Subjects
Keywords
- Date modified: