articleThe Journal of Economic PerspectivesFeb 1, 2005BRONZE OA

Identity and the Economics of Organizations

University of California, Berkeley · University of Maryland, College Park

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Abstract

The economics of organizations is replete with the pitfalls of monetary rewards and punishments to motivate workers. If economic incentives do not work, what does? This paper proposes that workers' self-image as jobholders, coupled with their ideal as to how their job should be done, can be a major work incentive. It shows how such identities can flatten reward schedules, as they solve “principal agent” problem. The paper also identifies and explores a new tradeoff: supervisors may provide information to principals, but create rifts within the workforce and reduce employees' intrinsic work incentives. We motivate the theory with examples from the classic sociology of military and civilian organizations.

Citation impact

1,684
total citations
FWCI
149.83
Percentile
100%
References
121
Citations per year

Authors

2

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Incentive
  • Work (physics)
  • Principal (computer security)
  • Workforce
  • Identity (music)
  • Ideal (ethics)
  • Microeconomics
  • Economics
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Decent work and economic growth
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