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Becoming 'We' instead of 'I'. Identity management and incentives in the workplace
- Publication Year :
- 2013
-
Abstract
- In this article, we show that the firm can be viewed as a locus of socialization wherein employees with heterogeneous work attitudes can be motivated and coordinated through adherence to a social norm of effort. We develop an agency model in which employees have both a personal and a social ideal of effort. The firm does not observe the personal ideals, but can make its workforce more sensitive to the social ideal by fostering social interaction in the workplace. We show that there are two reasons why the firm invests in social bonding. First, it reinforces the effectiveness of monetary incentives and increases average effort. Second, strengthening the social ideal reduces the adverse selection problem and the need for distorted compensation schemes. We further show that the firm allocates more time to social interaction when personal ideals of effort are low or heterogeneous. How work norms make people more similar (and predictable) and how this affects optimal incentive schemes has not yet received much attention in the literature.
- Subjects :
- Organizational Behavior and Human Resource Management
Economics and Econometrics
Principal–agent problem
Adverse selection
Identity (social science)
jel:D86
jel:D21
jel:D03
Microeconomics
jel:M5
Agency theory
Social interaction
Social norms
norm regulation
0502 economics and business
Agency (sociology)
050207 economics
050208 finance
ComputingMilieux_THECOMPUTINGPROFESSION
05 social sciences
Theory of the firm
Socialization
Social relation
Incentive
agency theory, social interaction, social norms, norm regulation
jel:J33
jel:J3
jel:D2
Business
monetary and non monetary incentives, social norms, norm regulation, identity
jel:D8
Subjects
Details
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....1d936f4693793068600ae5c6b0bea48f