Birds, Birds, Birds: Co-Worker Similarity, Workplace Diversity and Job Switches

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Abstract

We investigate how the demographic composition of the workforce along the sex, nationality, education, age and tenure dimensions affects job switches. Fitting duration models for workers’ job-to-job turnover rate that control for workplace fixed effects in a representative sample of large manufacturing plants in Germany during 1975–2016, we find that larger co-worker similarity in all five dimensions substantially depresses job-to-job moves, whereas workplace diversity is of limited importance. In line with conventional wisdom, which has that birds of a feather flock together, our interpretation of the results is that workers prefer having co-workers of their kind and place less value on diverse workplaces.

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Hirsch, B., Jahn, E. J., & Zwick, T. (2020). Birds, Birds, Birds: Co-Worker Similarity, Workplace Diversity and Job Switches. British Journal of Industrial Relations, 58(3), 690–718. https://doi.org/10.1111/bjir.12509

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