Peer pressure and productivity: the role of observing and being observed
Peer pressure and productivity: the role of observing and being observed
Peer effects arise in situations where workers observe each others’ work activity. In this paper, we disentangle the effect of observing a peer from that of being observed by a peer, by setting up a real effort experiment in which we manipulate the observability of performance. In particular, we randomize subjects into three groups: in the first one subjects are observed by another subject, but do not observe anybody; in the second one subjects observe somebody else's performance, but are not observed by anybody; in the last group subjects work in isolation, neither observing, nor being observed. To assess the importance of payoff externalities in the emergence of peer effects, we consider both a piece rate compensation scheme, where pay depends solely on own performance, and a team compensation scheme, where pay also depends on the performance of other team members. Overall, we find some evidence that subjects who are observed increase productivity at least initially when compensation is team based, while we find that subjects observing react to what they see when compensation is based only on own performance
peer effects, piece rate, team incentives, real-effort experiment
223-232
Georganas, Sotirios
d72240f4-7850-4a44-afdf-bab303a5f099
Tonin, Mirco
bd4b5fbe-5992-44cb-a702-9c768fdf9bc0
Vlassopoulos, Michael
2d557227-958c-4855-92a8-b74b398f95c7
September 2015
Georganas, Sotirios
d72240f4-7850-4a44-afdf-bab303a5f099
Tonin, Mirco
bd4b5fbe-5992-44cb-a702-9c768fdf9bc0
Vlassopoulos, Michael
2d557227-958c-4855-92a8-b74b398f95c7
Georganas, Sotirios, Tonin, Mirco and Vlassopoulos, Michael
(2015)
Peer pressure and productivity: the role of observing and being observed.
Journal of Economic Behavior & Organization, 117, .
(doi:10.1016/j.jebo.2015.06.014).
Abstract
Peer effects arise in situations where workers observe each others’ work activity. In this paper, we disentangle the effect of observing a peer from that of being observed by a peer, by setting up a real effort experiment in which we manipulate the observability of performance. In particular, we randomize subjects into three groups: in the first one subjects are observed by another subject, but do not observe anybody; in the second one subjects observe somebody else's performance, but are not observed by anybody; in the last group subjects work in isolation, neither observing, nor being observed. To assess the importance of payoff externalities in the emergence of peer effects, we consider both a piece rate compensation scheme, where pay depends solely on own performance, and a team compensation scheme, where pay also depends on the performance of other team members. Overall, we find some evidence that subjects who are observed increase productivity at least initially when compensation is team based, while we find that subjects observing react to what they see when compensation is based only on own performance
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Accepted/In Press date: 2 June 2015
Published date: September 2015
Keywords:
peer effects, piece rate, team incentives, real-effort experiment
Organisations:
Economics
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 382786
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/382786
ISSN: 0167-2681
PURE UUID: 96f6b401-c603-43ba-828d-41a594e46fbf
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Date deposited: 02 Nov 2015 13:49
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 03:28
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Author:
Sotirios Georganas
Author:
Mirco Tonin
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