State-Owned Enterprises in the Russian Federation : Employment Practices, Labor Markets, and Firm Performance
Low productivity and the competitiveness of Russian firms have been among Russia's primary economic challenges over the past decade. The Government of Russia (GoR) has made boosting productivity a policy priority and since 2012 has rolled out...
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okr-10986-320982021-05-25T09:26:06Z State-Owned Enterprises in the Russian Federation : Employment Practices, Labor Markets, and Firm Performance World Bank Group STATE-OWNED ENTERPRISES EMPLOYMENT PRACTICE PUBLIC SECTOR WAGE WAGE PREMIUM CORPORATE GOVERNANCE LABOR MARKET FIRM PRODUCTIVITY FIRM PERFORMANCE PUBLIC SECTOR EMPLOYMENT COMPENSATION SUBSIDIES MANAGEMENT PRACTICES PUBLIC SECTOR REFORM Low productivity and the competitiveness of Russian firms have been among Russia's primary economic challenges over the past decade. The Government of Russia (GoR) has made boosting productivity a policy priority and since 2012 has rolled out several visible policy initiatives to strengthen employment practices in firms to raise their productivity and positive spillovers, including the 2012 Plan for Raising the Productivity of Companies, the 2018-2024 National Project on Labor Productivity, and 2018-2019 National Plan for Competition Development. The objective of this report is to contribute to this productivity agenda by analyzing the employment practices of state-owned enterprises (SOEs), their implications for labor supply and internal firm capabilities, and the influence of state policy. SOEs contribute a significant share of output and employment in Russia's economy and academic recent research shows that they have lower productivity than private sector firms. The implications of SOE employment practices—compensation and management—on overall productivity however, has not been investigated, a gap that this report aims to fill by analyzing the following questions: What are SOE employment practices and how do they compare to international and private sector benchmarks? How do SOE employment practices, particularly compensation, affect allocation of labor across firms? How do SOE compensation and management practices shape their internal capabilities? How does government financial and non-financial support to SOEs influence these employment practices? Taking the level and form of government participation in the economy as a given, the report focuses primarily on the sector's current practices, and how government policies towards the sector can be improved to boost SOE performance and positive spillovers. We explore these questions using five Russian microlevel datasets, including worker and firm surveys and a large firm register. The report utilizes a taxonomy of SOEs that includes state SOEs which have 100 percent government ownership, and mixed SOEs which have some share of state ownership that is less than 100 percent. The report finds that Russian SOEs pay an overall compensation premium and that this premium contributes to labor shortages in the private sector. While overall the SOE sector has a small wage penalty, wage differentials with the private sector vary by type and size of the SOEs. Mixed SOEs pay a small wage premium over the private sector while state SOEs have a small wage penalty. Both types of SOEs pay a wage premium in competitive settings. SOEs have an overall compensation premium as they provide more generous benefits like paid vacations, maternity leave, and training than private sector firms. 2019-07-16T16:49:42Z 2019-07-16T16:49:42Z 2019-06-18 Report http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/246661562074950759/State-Owned-Enterprises-in-the-Russian-Federation-Employment-Practices-Labor-Markets-and-Firm-Performance http://hdl.handle.net/10986/32098 English CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank World Bank, Washington, DC Economic & Sector Work Economic & Sector Work :: Other Social Protection Study Europe and Central Asia Russian Federation |
repository_type |
Digital Repository |
institution_category |
Foreign Institution |
institution |
Digital Repositories |
building |
World Bank Open Knowledge Repository |
collection |
World Bank |
language |
English |
topic |
STATE-OWNED ENTERPRISES EMPLOYMENT PRACTICE PUBLIC SECTOR WAGE WAGE PREMIUM CORPORATE GOVERNANCE LABOR MARKET FIRM PRODUCTIVITY FIRM PERFORMANCE PUBLIC SECTOR EMPLOYMENT COMPENSATION SUBSIDIES MANAGEMENT PRACTICES PUBLIC SECTOR REFORM |
spellingShingle |
STATE-OWNED ENTERPRISES EMPLOYMENT PRACTICE PUBLIC SECTOR WAGE WAGE PREMIUM CORPORATE GOVERNANCE LABOR MARKET FIRM PRODUCTIVITY FIRM PERFORMANCE PUBLIC SECTOR EMPLOYMENT COMPENSATION SUBSIDIES MANAGEMENT PRACTICES PUBLIC SECTOR REFORM World Bank Group State-Owned Enterprises in the Russian Federation : Employment Practices, Labor Markets, and Firm Performance |
geographic_facet |
Europe and Central Asia Russian Federation |
description |
Low productivity and the competitiveness
of Russian firms have been among Russia's primary
economic challenges over the past decade. The Government of
Russia (GoR) has made boosting productivity a policy
priority and since 2012 has rolled out several visible
policy initiatives to strengthen employment practices in
firms to raise their productivity and positive spillovers,
including the 2012 Plan for Raising the Productivity of
Companies, the 2018-2024 National Project on Labor
Productivity, and 2018-2019 National Plan for Competition
Development. The objective of this report is to contribute
to this productivity agenda by analyzing the employment
practices of state-owned enterprises (SOEs), their
implications for labor supply and internal firm
capabilities, and the influence of state policy. SOEs
contribute a significant share of output and employment in
Russia's economy and academic recent research shows
that they have lower productivity than private sector firms.
The implications of SOE employment practices—compensation
and management—on overall productivity however, has not been
investigated, a gap that this report aims to fill by
analyzing the following questions: What are SOE employment
practices and how do they compare to international and
private sector benchmarks? How do SOE employment practices,
particularly compensation, affect allocation of labor across
firms? How do SOE compensation and management practices
shape their internal capabilities? How does government
financial and non-financial support to SOEs influence these
employment practices? Taking the level and form of
government participation in the economy as a given, the
report focuses primarily on the sector's current
practices, and how government policies towards the sector
can be improved to boost SOE performance and positive
spillovers. We explore these questions using five Russian
microlevel datasets, including worker and firm surveys and a
large firm register. The report utilizes a taxonomy of SOEs
that includes state SOEs which have 100 percent government
ownership, and mixed SOEs which have some share of state
ownership that is less than 100 percent. The report finds
that Russian SOEs pay an overall compensation premium and
that this premium contributes to labor shortages in the
private sector. While overall the SOE sector has a small
wage penalty, wage differentials with the private sector
vary by type and size of the SOEs. Mixed SOEs pay a small
wage premium over the private sector while state SOEs have a
small wage penalty. Both types of SOEs pay a wage premium in
competitive settings. SOEs have an overall compensation
premium as they provide more generous benefits like paid
vacations, maternity leave, and training than private sector firms. |
format |
Report |
author |
World Bank Group |
author_facet |
World Bank Group |
author_sort |
World Bank Group |
title |
State-Owned Enterprises in the Russian Federation : Employment Practices, Labor Markets, and Firm Performance |
title_short |
State-Owned Enterprises in the Russian Federation : Employment Practices, Labor Markets, and Firm Performance |
title_full |
State-Owned Enterprises in the Russian Federation : Employment Practices, Labor Markets, and Firm Performance |
title_fullStr |
State-Owned Enterprises in the Russian Federation : Employment Practices, Labor Markets, and Firm Performance |
title_full_unstemmed |
State-Owned Enterprises in the Russian Federation : Employment Practices, Labor Markets, and Firm Performance |
title_sort |
state-owned enterprises in the russian federation : employment practices, labor markets, and firm performance |
publisher |
World Bank, Washington, DC |
publishDate |
2019 |
url |
http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/246661562074950759/State-Owned-Enterprises-in-the-Russian-Federation-Employment-Practices-Labor-Markets-and-Firm-Performance http://hdl.handle.net/10986/32098 |
_version_ |
1764475776960299008 |