Workplace Automation and Corporate Liquidity Policy

Using an occupational probability of computerization, we measure a firm’s ability to replace labor with automated capital. Our evidence suggests that the potential to automate a workforce enhances operating flexibility, allowing firms to hold less precautionary cash. To provide evidence for this mec...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inFinance and economics discussion series no. 2023-023; pp. 1 - 63
Main Authors Bates, Thomas W., Du, Fangfang, Wang, Jessie Jiaxu
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published 01.04.2023
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Summary:Using an occupational probability of computerization, we measure a firm’s ability to replace labor with automated capital. Our evidence suggests that the potential to automate a workforce enhances operating flexibility, allowing firms to hold less precautionary cash. To provide evidence for this mechanism, we exploit the 2011–2012 Thailand hard drive crisis as an exogenous shock to the cost of automation. In addition, the negative relation between prospective automation and cash holdings is greater for firms with a lower expected cost of worker displacement and greater labor-induced operating leverage.
ISSN:1936-2854
2767-3898
DOI:10.17016/feds.2023.023