The Impact of Sickness Absenteeism on Productivity: New Evidence from Belgian Matched Panel Data

28 Pages Posted: 30 May 2018

See all articles by Elena Grinza

Elena Grinza

University Of Milan

Francois Rycx

Université Libre de Bruxelles (ULB) - Department of Applied Economics (DULBEA); IZA Institute of Labor Economics

Abstract

We investigate the impact of sickness absenteeism on productivity by using rich longitudinal matched employer-employee data on Belgian private firms. We deal with endogeneity, which arises from unobserved firm heterogeneity and reverse causality, by applying a modified version of the Ackerberg et al's (2015) control function method, which explicitly removes firm fixed effects. Our main finding is that, in general, sickness absenteeism substantially dampens firm productivity. An increase of 1 percentage point in the rate of sickness absenteeism entails a productivity loss of 0.24%. Yet, we find that the impact is much diversified depending on the categories of workers who are absent and across different types of firms.Our results show that sickness absenteeism is detrimental mainly when absent workers are high-tenure or blue-collar workers. Moreover, they show that sickness absenteeism is harmful mostly to industrial firms, high capital-intensive companies, and small- and medium-sized enterprises. This overall picture is coherent with the idea that sickness absenteeism is problematic when absent workers embed high levels of firm/task-specific (tacit) knowledge, when the work of absent employees is highly interconnected with the work of other employees (e.g., along the assembly line), and when firms face more limitations in substituting temporarily absent workers.

Keywords: sickness absenteeism, firm productivity, semiparametric methods for estimating production functions, longitudinal matched employer-employee data

JEL Classification: D24, M59, I15

Suggested Citation

Grinza, Elena and Rycx, François, The Impact of Sickness Absenteeism on Productivity: New Evidence from Belgian Matched Panel Data. IZA Discussion Paper No. 11543, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=3185238 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.3185238

Elena Grinza (Contact Author)

University Of Milan ( email )

Via Conservatorio 7
Milan, 20122
Italy

François Rycx

Université Libre de Bruxelles (ULB) - Department of Applied Economics (DULBEA) ( email )

Ave. Franklin D Roosevelt, 50
Brussels, B-1050
Belgium
+32 0 2 6504110 (Phone)
+32 0 2 6503825 (Fax)

IZA Institute of Labor Economics

P.O. Box 7240
Bonn, D-53072
Germany

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