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AuthorBen-Nasr, Hamdi
AuthorGoaied, Mohamed
Available date2025-09-08T04:51:01Z
Publication Date2024-01-01
Publication NameApplied Economics
Identifierhttp://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00036846.2024.2386861
CitationBen-Nasr, H., & Goaied, M. (2024). Do employee-friendly practices affect inventory leanness? Applied Economics, 1–15. https://doi.org/10.1080/00036846.2024.2386861
ISSN00036846
URIhttps://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?partnerID=HzOxMe3b&scp=85201947041&origin=inward
URIhttp://hdl.handle.net/10576/67113
AbstractWe examine the impact of employee-friendly practices (i.e. employment quality, training and development, and employee turnover) on inventory leanness. We use the Empirical Leanness Indicator (ELI) as a proxy for inventory leanness. We employ OLS estimates to estimate our regressions while controlling for country, industry, and year-fixed effects and clustering standard errors at the firm level. We use alternative approaches to address endogeneity issues, such as the instrumental variable and the Heckman two-stage approaches. Our results suggest that employee-friendly practices improve inventory leanness. Our findings suggest that firms should invest in employee-friendly practices. This policy implication is of paramount importance for firms with more employees working in roles involving inventory (as opposed to automation or non-labour methods) and in environments with high dynamism and complexity. We also suggest that reputation mediates the relationship between employee-friendly practices and inventory leanness.
SponsorHamdi Ben-Nasr would like to acknowledge financial support from Qatar university through the internal grant [IRCC-2024-005].
Languageen
PublisherRoutledge
SubjectEmployee-friendly practices
inventory leanness
reputation
stakeholder theory
TitleDo employee-friendly practices affect inventory leanness?
TypeArticle
ESSN1466-4283
dc.accessType Full Text


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