We establish that statistical discrimination is possible if and only if it is impossible to uniquely identify the signal structure observed by an employer from a realized empirical distribution of skills. The impossibility of statistical discrimination is shown to be equivalent to the existence of a fair, skill-dependent remuneration for every set of tasks every signal-dependent optimal assignment of workers to tasks. Finally, we connect this literature to Bayesian persuasion, establishing that if the possibility of discrimination is absent, then the optimal signalling problem results in a linear payoff function (as well as a kind of converse)
In the US, black workers spend more time in unemployment, lose their jobs more rapidly, and earn low...
We study the optimal management of teams in which agents’ effort decisions are mapped (via a product...
Measuring market discrimination is extremely difficult except in the increasingly rare case where ph...
We establish that statistical discrimination is possible if and only if it is impossible to uniquely...
This paper provides a simple model which explains that statistical discrimination can arise in a pur...
When information acquisition is costly but flexible, a principal may rationally acquire information ...
In the labor market, statistical discrimination occurs when employers' beliefs about workers' behavi...
In the labor market, statistical discrimination occurs when employers’ beliefs about workers’ behavi...
We provide a test for statistical discrimination or rational stereotyping in in environments in whic...
We develop a model of statistical discrimination in occupational licensing. In the model, there is e...
We test the implications of a statistical discrimination model with asymmetric learning. Firms recei...
We study the link between Phelps-Aigner-Cain-type statistical discrimination and familiar notions of...
We develop a statistical discrimination modbel where groups of workers differ in the observability o...
We investigate how lack of information may bias the investigator's assessment of the presence ...
We consider a matching model of the labour market where workers that differ in quality send signals ...
In the US, black workers spend more time in unemployment, lose their jobs more rapidly, and earn low...
We study the optimal management of teams in which agents’ effort decisions are mapped (via a product...
Measuring market discrimination is extremely difficult except in the increasingly rare case where ph...
We establish that statistical discrimination is possible if and only if it is impossible to uniquely...
This paper provides a simple model which explains that statistical discrimination can arise in a pur...
When information acquisition is costly but flexible, a principal may rationally acquire information ...
In the labor market, statistical discrimination occurs when employers' beliefs about workers' behavi...
In the labor market, statistical discrimination occurs when employers’ beliefs about workers’ behavi...
We provide a test for statistical discrimination or rational stereotyping in in environments in whic...
We develop a model of statistical discrimination in occupational licensing. In the model, there is e...
We test the implications of a statistical discrimination model with asymmetric learning. Firms recei...
We study the link between Phelps-Aigner-Cain-type statistical discrimination and familiar notions of...
We develop a statistical discrimination modbel where groups of workers differ in the observability o...
We investigate how lack of information may bias the investigator's assessment of the presence ...
We consider a matching model of the labour market where workers that differ in quality send signals ...
In the US, black workers spend more time in unemployment, lose their jobs more rapidly, and earn low...
We study the optimal management of teams in which agents’ effort decisions are mapped (via a product...
Measuring market discrimination is extremely difficult except in the increasingly rare case where ph...