Abstract
A series of seminal papers argues that poaching hampers company-sponsored general training. Empirically, however, the existence and extent of poaching remain open questions. We provide a novel empirical strategy to identify poaching. We find that only few apprenticeship training firms in Germany are ‘poaching victims’ or ‘poaching raiders’. Victims are more likely to be in a temporary downturn and raiders are more likely to be growing. Victims hardly change their training strategy after poaching and poaching seems be a transitory event. This is an important result for countries that intend to introduce apprenticeship-type training and need to convince firms to participate in training.
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CITATION STYLE
Mohrenweiser, J., Zwick, T., & Backes-Gellner, U. (2019). Poaching and Firm-Sponsored Training. British Journal of Industrial Relations, 57(1), 143–181. https://doi.org/10.1111/bjir.12305
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