publications

Politics at work

16/04/2026
Year: 2025
Author(s): Emanuele Colonnelli, Valdemar Pinho Neto and Edoardo Teso

by Emanuele Colonnelli, Valdemar Pinho Neto and Edoardo Teso

American Economic Review (2025)

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ET_2025

Abstract

We study how individual political views shape firm behavior and labor market outcomes using new microdata from Brazil. We first show that business owners are considerably more likely to employ copartisan workers. This phenomenon is in part driven by the overlapping of political and social networks. Multiple tests—surveys, event studies, analyses of wage premia and promotions within the firm, and a field experiment—further highlight how business owners’ political preferences directly influence firms’ employment decisions. A channel of political discrimination appears more relevant than one of political quid pro quo between firms and politicians. 

Keywords: Field Experiments, Firm Behavior: Empirical Analysis, Political Processes: Rent-seeking, Lobbying, Elections, Legislatures, and Voting Behavior, Labor Demand, Personnel Economics: Firm Employment Decisions, Promotions, Formal and Informal Sectors, Shadow Economy, Institutional Arrangements, Economic Sociology, Economic Anthropology, Language, Social and Economic Stratification