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Working
Paper Series:
08.02
Are Judges Sensitive to Economic Conditions? Evidence from UK
Employment Tribunals
Ioana Marinescu
http://www.harrisschool.uchicago.edu/faculty/web-pages/ioana-marinescu.asp
Abstract:
In the UK, dismissed workers can sue their ex-employers for unfair dismissal. This
paper investigates whether judges deciding on such cases are sensitive to economic
conditions faced by firms and workers. In bad times, getting fired is more costly for
workers, while at the same time firms find firing costs harder to bear. How do judges
decide? I use British data on individual unfair dismissal and redundancy payment
cases brought to Employment Tribunals in 1990-1992. Controlling for case selection,
I find that, when the dismissed worker has found a new job, higher unemployment
and bankruptcy rates both have a negative impact on the worker’s probability of
prevailing at trial. However, when dismissed workers are still unemployed, a higher
unemployment rate has a positive impact on their probability of winning. On the
whole population of cases brought to trial, a one point increase in the unemployment
rate leads to a 7 points decrease in the probability of judges deciding in favour of
dismissed employees. An increase in the bankruptcy rate has a similar effect. These
findings are consistent with the idea that judges maximize the joint welfare of the
dismissed worker and the firm, tailoring firing costs to local and individual economic
circumstances.
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