Did workers pay for the passage of workers' compensation laws?
1994
Fishback, Price Van Meter | Kantor, Shawn Everett
Market responses to legislative reforms often mitigate the expected gains that reformers promise in legislation. Contemporaries hailed workers' compensation as a boon to workers because it raised the amount of post-accident compensation paid to injured workers. Despite the large gains to workers, employers often supported the legislation. Analysis of several wage samples from the early 1900s shows that employers were able to pass a significant part of the added costs of higher post-accident compensation onto some workers in the form of reductions in wages. The size of the wage offsets, however, were smaller for union workers.
显示更多 [+] 显示较少 [-]AGROVOC关键词
书目信息
出版者 National Bureau of Economic Research | Cambridge, MA : National Bureau of Economic Research, 1994