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The intrinsic value of decision rights
- Publication Year :
- 2018
-
Abstract
- Philosophers, psychologists, and economists have long argued that certain decision rights carry not only instrumental value but may also be valuable for their own sake. The ideas of autonomy, freedom, and liberty derive their intuitive appeal - at least partly - from an assumed positive intrinsic value of decision rights. Providing clean evidence for the existence of this intrinsic value and measuring its size, however, is intricate. Here, we develop a method capable of achieving these goals. The data reveal that the large majority of our subjects intrinsically value decision rights beyond their instrumental benefit. The intrinsic valuation of decision rights has potentially important consequences for corporate governance, human resource management, and optimal job design: it may explain why managers value power, why employees appreciate jobs with task discretion, why individuals sort into self-employment, and why the reallocation of decision rights is often very difficult and cumbersome. Our method and results may also prove useful in developing an empirical revealed preference foundation for concepts such as "freedom of choice" and "individual autonomy".
- Subjects :
- Decision rights
Test
decision rights, intrinsic value, authority
Soziale Werte
jel:D23
2002 Economics and Econometrics
decision rights
Entscheidung
jel:D03
ECON Department of Economics
Experiment
10007 Department of Economics
C91
intrinsic value
ddc:330
Entscheidungstheorie
Motivation
jel:C91
Decision rights, authority, private benefits of control
Autorität
330 Economics
D23
D03
Entscheidungsbefugnis
private benefits of control
authority
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....48394417311da60e0dfd9bd0130e8b70