Are franchisees more prone to employment standards violations than other businesses? New Research from CIRHR Instructor Mark Easton

October 14, 2020 by Anonymous

CIRHR instructor Mark Easton, who teaches Compensation and Employment Relations in the undergraduate program, has published new research in The Economic and Labour Relations Review. "Are franchisees more prone to employment standards violations than other businesses? Evidence from Ontario, Canada" is co-autored with Andrea Noack (Ryerson University) and Leah Vosko (York University).

Abstract

Using an administrative dataset from the Ontario Ministry of Labour, we investigate three hypotheses about employment standards violations among franchised businesses: (1) franchisees have a higher probability of violating employment standards than other businesses, (2) franchisees have a higher probability of monetary/wage-related ES violations than other businesses, and (3) franchisees have a lower probability of repaying monetary/wage-related violations than other businesses. The results of our statistical models suggest that overall, franchisees are indeed more likely to violate ES, have a higher probability of monetary/wage-related violations, and are less likely to repay such violations. However, the results vary substantially by industry. While franchisees had only marginally higher probabilities of an ES violation in two of the seven industry-groups examined, five of the seven industries showed substantially higher probabilities of a monetary violation. The results also show that franchisees in three industry groups (retail, accommodation and food services, and education, public administration, healthcare and social services) are particularly prone to monetary violations.

 

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