We followed field workers administering a household survey over a 12-week period and examined how their reciprocal behavior towards the employer responded to a sequence of exogenous wage increases and wage cuts. To disentangle the effects of reciprocal behavior from other explicit incentives that occur naturally in long-term employment relationships, we devised a novel measure of effort that not only captures the notion of work morale but that field workers perceived as unmonitored. While wage increases had no significant effect, wage cuts led to a strong and significant decline in unmonitored effort. This finding provides clear evidence of a highly asymmetric reciprocity response to wage changes. Our estimates further imply that field work...
Abstract: Standard models in labor economics and agency theory assumes that only extrinsic motivatio...
This paper reports results of an experiment designed to analyze whether reciprocal behavior survives...
We investigate the effects of pay comparison information (i.e. information about what coworkers earn...
We study the role of reciprocity in a labor market field experiment. In a recent paper, Gneezy and L...
Employment contracts are often incomplete, leaving many responsibilities subject to workers’ discret...
Employment contracts are often incomplete, leaving many responsibilitiessubject to workers’ discreti...
We report the results from three distinct experiments, conducted in the Netherlands and in the Unite...
We present a field experiment to assess the effect of own and peer wage variations on actual work ef...
While papers such as Akerlof and Yellen (1990) and Rabin (1993) argue that psychological considerati...
The presence of workers who reciprocate higher wages with greater effort can have important conseque...
This paper presents a model that can account for, and explain, two well documented empirical asymmet...
We examine the gift exchange hypothesis on both the quantity and quality of work using a hybrid fiel...
This article complements the experimental literature that has shown the importance of reciprocity fo...
McGill University for valuable comments. Chemin thanks to Social Sciences and Humanities Research Co...
We present a field experiment to assess the effect of own and peer wage variations on actual work ef...
Abstract: Standard models in labor economics and agency theory assumes that only extrinsic motivatio...
This paper reports results of an experiment designed to analyze whether reciprocal behavior survives...
We investigate the effects of pay comparison information (i.e. information about what coworkers earn...
We study the role of reciprocity in a labor market field experiment. In a recent paper, Gneezy and L...
Employment contracts are often incomplete, leaving many responsibilities subject to workers’ discret...
Employment contracts are often incomplete, leaving many responsibilitiessubject to workers’ discreti...
We report the results from three distinct experiments, conducted in the Netherlands and in the Unite...
We present a field experiment to assess the effect of own and peer wage variations on actual work ef...
While papers such as Akerlof and Yellen (1990) and Rabin (1993) argue that psychological considerati...
The presence of workers who reciprocate higher wages with greater effort can have important conseque...
This paper presents a model that can account for, and explain, two well documented empirical asymmet...
We examine the gift exchange hypothesis on both the quantity and quality of work using a hybrid fiel...
This article complements the experimental literature that has shown the importance of reciprocity fo...
McGill University for valuable comments. Chemin thanks to Social Sciences and Humanities Research Co...
We present a field experiment to assess the effect of own and peer wage variations on actual work ef...
Abstract: Standard models in labor economics and agency theory assumes that only extrinsic motivatio...
This paper reports results of an experiment designed to analyze whether reciprocal behavior survives...
We investigate the effects of pay comparison information (i.e. information about what coworkers earn...