2003
DOI: 10.3386/w10106
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Firm Location and the Creation and Utilization of Human Capital

Abstract: This paper presents a theory of location choice that draws on insights from the incomplete contracts and investment flexibility (real option) literatures. We provide conditions under which human capital is more efficiently created and better utilized within industrial clusters that contain similar firms. Our analysis indicates that location choices are influenced by the extent to which training costs are borne by firms versus employees as well as by the uncertainty about future productivity shocks and the abil… Show more

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Cited by 49 publications
(51 citation statements)
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“…Overman and Puga (2010) extend this approach to derive the specific prediction that industries facing stronger idiosyncratic shocks will exhibit a greater tendency to agglomerate and that agglomeration will be associated with worker turnover. Matouschek and Robert-Nicoud (2005), Combes and Duranton (2006), and Almazan, de Motta, and Titman (2007) all consider the tension between the beneficial turnover considered by Marshall and the risks that firms and workers face that others -either their opposites or their rivals -will expropriate value created by specific investments. In particular, a firm may be reluctant to train its workers if this training would provoke either opportunism by its employees or poaching by its rivals.…”
Section: Literaturementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Overman and Puga (2010) extend this approach to derive the specific prediction that industries facing stronger idiosyncratic shocks will exhibit a greater tendency to agglomerate and that agglomeration will be associated with worker turnover. Matouschek and Robert-Nicoud (2005), Combes and Duranton (2006), and Almazan, de Motta, and Titman (2007) all consider the tension between the beneficial turnover considered by Marshall and the risks that firms and workers face that others -either their opposites or their rivals -will expropriate value created by specific investments. In particular, a firm may be reluctant to train its workers if this training would provoke either opportunism by its employees or poaching by its rivals.…”
Section: Literaturementioning
confidence: 99%
“…From the firms' perspective, while the merger always leads to greater ex post payoff from employee innovations, it can still reduce ex ante firm expected profits if its negative effects on employee incentives are sufficiently large. 1 We show that the two firms, under certain conditions, do not find it desirable to merge even if doing so provides the post-merger firm with the co-insurance benefit and a greater market power.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Matouschek and Robert-Nicoud (2005) show that the location decision of firms depends on whether the firm or the employee invests in human capital, and whether human capital investment is industry-specific or firm-specific. In Almazan et al (2007), geographical proximity promotes the development of a competitive labor market, and firms prefer to cluster when employees pay 2 See, among others, Gertner, Scharfstein and Stein (1994), Scharfstein and Stein (2000), Fulghieri and Hodrick (2006). For a review of this literature, see Stein (2003).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…However, the model explicitly rules out firm-sponsored training. Matouschek and Robert-Nicoud (2005) and Almazan et al (2007) propose models in which firms choose a location depending on the financing of their employees' training, with isolation being the preferable choice if the firms bear a high share of the training costs. These theoretical approaches all point towards a negative relationship between local competition and firm-sponsored training activity, such as apprentice…”
Section: Poaching As a Regional Externalitymentioning
confidence: 99%