|
|
|
XI. BUILDING HEALTH AND SAFETY INTO
EMPLOYMENT RELATIONSHIPS IN THE
CONSTRUCTION INDUSTRY
Construction Site Regulation
and OSHA Decentralization
Alison Morantz
National Bureau of Economic Research
Abstract
Promoting regulatory compliance in the
construction industry has long been a high institutional priority of the
Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA). Yet OSHA officials
carry out enforcement activities in only 29 U.S. states. Elsewhere, it
is state officials who conduct inspections. This paper links the partly
decentralized structure of OSHA enforcement to interstate disparities
in regulatory enforcement. First, construction regulations seem to be
less strictly enforced by state inspectors. Second, only in the federal
enforcement regime do repeat inspections of the same construction site
or firm significantly reduce the number of future violations found.
Introduction
Because construction workers are at especially
high risk of occupational injuries and fatalities, promoting regulatory
compliance in the construction sector has long been an institutional priority
for the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA). Yet, because
of a special "opt-out" provision of the Occupational Safety and Health
Act, federal OSHA officials conduct inspections in only 29 U.S. states,
two territories, and the District of Columbia. It is state officials who
enforce OSHA regulations in the remaining 21 states and two territories
(collectively known as the "state plan states"). This paper explores whether
the partly decentralized structure of OSHA enforcement is linked to any
interstate variations in the nature or effectiveness of regulatory activity.
The paper is divided into two sections.
The first section compares several key characteristics of enforcement
behavior across state plan states and federal OSHA. The second section
examines, across regimes, the impact of an inspection on a construction
site's future level of regulatory compliance. The data set on which I
rely, drawn from OSHA records between the years 1987 and 1994, includes
inspection data for national construction firms at or above the eightieth
percentile in annual revenues. It contains information on the timing and
frequency of inspections, number and severity of regulatory violations,
and magnitude of fines.
Comparing Patterns in Regulatory Behavior
Regardless of whether it is state or federal
officials who actually conduct inspections, OSHA requires enforcement
officials to record many key statistics associated with an inspection
of a construction site. Among the most important of these are the date
and location of the inspection, the name of the inspected firm, the reason
the inspection took place, the number of violations (including the subset
deemed to be "serious"), the number of workers in the establishment, whether
the workforce is unionized, and the average size of penalties assessed.
By focusing on these characteristics, one can compare the basic features
of regulatory behavior across the two enforcement regimes.
As is shown in Table 1, the general impression
that emerges from such a comparison is that the regulations are applied
less stringently in state plan states. Although the probability of an
inspection is slightly higher in state plan states, the probability of
an inspection carrying a penalty is much higher in federal OSHA.
Federal inspectors record roughly twice as many serious violations per
inspection as do their state counterparts. Average penalties per establishment
worker are more than three times as large in federal OSHA as in state
plan states. Even when one limits the comparison to inspections in which
a penalty is imposed, the size of the fine is still twice as large in
federal OSHA. The "net" expected penalty for each firm (i.e., the probability
of an inspection * the average penalty) in state plan states is more than
double that of the federal OSHA system. Finally, the average monetary
penalty assessed per serious violation is about 70 percent higher in the
federal OSHA system than in state plan states.
It is possible that the decentralization
of OSHA enforcement is not the root cause of these differences. For example,
the very states that are most likely to engage in lax enforcement (because
of unobservable historical or political factors) may be the very states
most likely to have chosen state plan status. In an effort to test for
the existence of selection bias, I divided the 50 states into three propensity
score "strata" (p > 0.5; p < 0.5; and 0.25 < p
<0.75) and compared enforcement indicators within each stratum. Although
the magnitude of the differentials varies, the same cross-regime disparities
emerge in all of the strata. (Complete results are available on request.)
Comparing the Effects of Regulatory Behavior
OSHA's existence is premised on the notion
that regulatory intervention can alter firm behavior. Therefore, a key
"litmus test" of regulatory effectiveness is whether the inspection of
a given construction site (or the inspection of a different site operated
by the same firm) reduces the number of future violations found at the
site. Using this criterion as a basis for comparison, one can use the
OSHA inspection data to determine whether construction site inspections
are equally likely to improve future compliance inside and outside of
the federal regime.
For this phase of the analysis, I use
the full sample of inspections, which often includes many repeated inspections
of the same site. I share with earlier studies the critical assumption
that, although firms take into account the expected net costs of hypothetical
OSHA inspections in their initial optimization decision, the occurrence
of an actual OSHA inspection has an independent effect on firm
behavior. The goal of the modeling technique, therefore, is to quantify
this "specific deterrence" effect of inspection behavior by examining
the change in measured compliance between successive inspections.
There are four key independent variables in each of the models used: the
"sequence number" of an inspection at a particular site; the sequence
number of the inspection for a particular firm (across all of its sites);
and both variables interacted with state plan status. A significantly
negative coefficient on any of these variables indicates a downward effect
on the future number of violations.
Past literature has modeled the outcome
variable of interest--regulatory compliance--in two different ways. Focusing
on the "extensive" margin of compliance, Weil (2000) has defined compliance
as the absence of any serious recorded violations. Meanwhile, Gray (1990)
has incorporated the "intensive" margin by using a continuous dependent
variable in a count model specification. I used both techniques throughout
the analysis, estimating both a probit model and a negative binomial count
model. (A negative binomial specification was chosen because of the frequency
of zero values and strong evidence of overdispersion.)
Finally, I examine the effects of inspections
in two different ways. First, I explore the impact of the very first OSHA
inspection in two regimes, because undergoing a formal inspection for
the first time may help alert firms and workers to simple dangers of which
they were not previously aware and encourage them to implement simple
safety practices that require only negligible capital investments. After
the initial inspection, however, changing firm behavior may involve more
systemic workplace restructuring and/or costly expenditures. Therefore,
I separately model the impact of repeated OSHA inspections in the
two regimes to isolate the effect of later inspections on firm behavior.
This two-phased approach differs somewhat from that used in previous studies,
which use a single specification to encompass the effects of all inspections
(Gray 1990; Weil 2000).
Table 2 summarizes the control variables
included in the models. I include two factors that could affect firm-specific
costs of compliance: union status and the log of the number of workers
in the establishment. I also control for several specialized "triggers"
of OSHA inspections that could affect the thoroughness of the inspection
and/or likelihood of violations: employee complaints, on-site accidents,
and employee complaints issuing from unionized workplaces. (The latter
interaction term was included on the theory that, in some unionized settings,
employees may file OSHA complaints as part of a concerted strategy to
enhance their bargaining position with management.)
Two additional independent variables included
in the model require elaboration. First, Gray (1990) has found that firms
respond more readily to inspections with penalties than to those carrying
no monetary sanction. Moreover, in an intuitive sense, one might expect
that a construction site or firm that has been frequently inspected in
the past, but never penalized, might respond differently than one that
has faced a series of escalating penalties. (OSHA's penalty structure,
for example, contains escalating penalties for repeated noncompliance.)
To capture this aspect of a site's inspection history, I include the log
of prior accumulated penalties as an independent variable. Second, there
may be significant "type" heterogeneity among construction firms in terms
of their inherent technological capacity, or institutional willingness,
to comply with regulations. Without using a fixed effects specification,
it is impossible to fully control for such site-specific variation. When
firms are subjected to a high number of inspections over a sustained period,
however, it could be because inspectors have identified something about
their compliance behavior, production technology, management, and/or inherent
dangerousness that merits special scrutiny. I follow the lead of several
earlier studies in using the total number of inspections experienced
by each construction contractor during the entire study period as a rough
proxy for firm "type" (Gray 1990; Weil 2000).
In one key respect, my results show that
the two regimes are statistically indistinguishable. The first
inspection has a large, significant impact on a construction site's future
level of compliance in both regimes. (Complete results are available on
request.) As is shown in Table 3, however, a different pattern emerges
when one focuses on "repeat" inspections (i.e., the second and subsequent
inspections of the same construction site). In both of the specifications
tested (probit model and negative binomial model), the coefficients on
the dummies for repeat inspections are negative and highly significant.
Yet their interactions with state plan status are positive, significant,
and large enough to offset the negative coefficient on repeat inspections.
In other words, although repeated OSHA inspections of the same construction
firm or site significantly increase compliance in the federal regime,
the same does not hold true for state plan states.
Conclusions
Since the passage of the Occupational
Safety and Health Act, the provision permitting individual states to "opt
out" of the federal enforcement system has remained controversial. Although
this provision is explicitly premised on the requirement that state enforcement
be "at least as effective" as federal OSHA, many observers in the 1970s
questioned the wisdom of this partial decentralization of regulatory authority.
After posing the question of whether the opt-out provision has fostered
any interstate disparities in enforcement behavior or effectiveness, this
study offers a preliminary answer through an analysis of OSHA inspection
records.
The results suggest that the partly decentralized
structure of OSHA enforcement may, indeed, be linked to two salient interstate
disparities in regulatory activity. First, OSHA regulations seem to be
enforced more stringently when federal officials are conducting the inspections.
Second, repeated inspections of the same construction site or firm significantly
reduce future violations only within the federal system.
These results provide some empirical basis
for questioning whether state officials are "at least as effective" as
their federal OSHA counterparts in promoting regulatory compliance in
the construction industry. Elsewhere, I link these disparities in enforcement
behavior to differentials in injury rates and show that similar disparities
between state and federal enforcement emerge from an empirical analysis
of the steel sector (Morantz 2003). Future work might profitably explore
whether the disparities I identify for construction are the norm across
the OSHA-regulated economy, whether they have changed significantly over
time, and whether they apply in other regulatory settings.
References
Gray, Wayne and Carol Adaire Jones. 1990. "Are OSHA
Inspections Effective? A Longitudinal Study in the Manufacturing Sector."
NBER Working Paper No. 3233. Cambridge, MA: National Bureau of Economic
Research, Inc.
Morantz, Alison. 2003. "Has Regulatory Devolution Injured
American Workers? An Empirical Comparison of State and Federal OSHA Enforcement."
Paper to be presented at the American Law & Economics Association
Annual Conference. September 19-21, 2003.
Weil, David. 2000. "Assessing OSHA Performance: Evidence
from the Construction Industry." IRRA Proceedings 2000 (52nd Annual Meeting).
In "OSHA Enforcement and Regulatory Compliance in the U.S. Construction
Industry," pp. 83-93.
|