Social Preferences and the Response to Incentives: Evidence from Personnel Data
Centre for Economic Policy Research · London School of Economics and Political Science · +3 more institutions
Abstract
We present evidence on whether workers have social preferences by comparing workers' productivity under relative incentives, where individual effort imposes a negative externality on others, with their productivity under piece rates, where it does not. We find that the productivity of the average worker is at least 50 percent higher under piece rates than under relative incentives. We show that this is due to workers partially internalizing the negative externality their effort imposes on others under relative incentives, especially when working alongside their friends. Under piece rates, the relationship among workers does not affect productivity. Further analysis reveals that workers internalize the…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 47.67
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 49
Authors
3Topics & keywords
- Incentive
- Productivity
- Externality
- Altruism (biology)
- Economics
- Affect (linguistics)
- Labour economics
- Microeconomics
- Decent work and economic growth