Using data from a large U.S. retail firm, we examine how racial matches between managers and their employees affect rates of employee quits, dismissals and promotions. We exploit changes in management at hundreds of stores to estimate hazard models with store fixed effects that control for all unobserved differences across store locations. We find a general pattern of own-race bias across all outcomes in that employees usually have better outcomes when they are the same race as their manager. But we do find anomalies in this pattern, particularly when the manager-employee match violates traditional racial hierarchies (e.g. nonwhites managing whites)
Research Paper Number 915, ISSN 0819-2642, ISBN 0 7340 2571 8We use recent matched employer-employee...
Because research is needed to identify the conditions that facilitate or impede the prevalence of pe...
More than fifty years after the U.S. prohibited employers from using the race as a factor in employm...
Using data from a large U.S. retail firm, we examine how differences in race, age, and gender betwee...
Using data from a large U.S. retail employer, we examine how demographic differences between manager...
Using personnel data from a large U.S. retail firm, we examine whether the race of the hiring manage...
This study identifies a unique bias faced by Black employees which makes it challenging for this gro...
Using administrative records from a large national US retailer, we find managers learn to discrimina...
Examining the performance of cashiers in a French grocery store chain, we find that manager bias neg...
We explore whether abusive supervision may occur more in mixed-race supervisor-subordinate dyads. Sp...
Recent research has suggested that employees are highly affected by perceptions of their managers’ p...
Abstract: Using personnel data from a large U.S. retail firm, we examine whether the race or ethnic...
High rates of turnover among racial minority employees have largely been explained by the adage that...
We develop a job search model in which some employers hold unobservable racial prejudice toward blac...
Preliminary research suggests that employees use the demographic makeup of their organization to mak...
Research Paper Number 915, ISSN 0819-2642, ISBN 0 7340 2571 8We use recent matched employer-employee...
Because research is needed to identify the conditions that facilitate or impede the prevalence of pe...
More than fifty years after the U.S. prohibited employers from using the race as a factor in employm...
Using data from a large U.S. retail firm, we examine how differences in race, age, and gender betwee...
Using data from a large U.S. retail employer, we examine how demographic differences between manager...
Using personnel data from a large U.S. retail firm, we examine whether the race of the hiring manage...
This study identifies a unique bias faced by Black employees which makes it challenging for this gro...
Using administrative records from a large national US retailer, we find managers learn to discrimina...
Examining the performance of cashiers in a French grocery store chain, we find that manager bias neg...
We explore whether abusive supervision may occur more in mixed-race supervisor-subordinate dyads. Sp...
Recent research has suggested that employees are highly affected by perceptions of their managers’ p...
Abstract: Using personnel data from a large U.S. retail firm, we examine whether the race or ethnic...
High rates of turnover among racial minority employees have largely been explained by the adage that...
We develop a job search model in which some employers hold unobservable racial prejudice toward blac...
Preliminary research suggests that employees use the demographic makeup of their organization to mak...
Research Paper Number 915, ISSN 0819-2642, ISBN 0 7340 2571 8We use recent matched employer-employee...
Because research is needed to identify the conditions that facilitate or impede the prevalence of pe...
More than fifty years after the U.S. prohibited employers from using the race as a factor in employm...