Performance-related pay and objective measures of health after correcting for sample selection
Performance-related pay and objective measures of health after correcting for sample selection
Much of the literature on performance-related pay (PRP) and poor health relies on self reported data, and the relationship is particularly difficult to examine due to confounding variables. To address these limitations we examine three groups of health measures using data from the UKHLS: blood pressure (n=5667), inflammation markers in blood (n=4025) and self-reported health (n=6120). Physiological markers of health allow us to circumvent some of the issues associated with self-reported measures and by using size of firm and % share of PRP workers in occupation we also statistically control for some of the endogeneity associated with self-selection bias. Regressions correcting for self-selection bias and sociodemographic covariates find that PRP contracts are associated with poorer self-reported mental health, higher systolic blood pressure and higher levels of fibrinogen. These findings have implications for firms that use PRP as they may need to implement policies to mitigate against stress.
Andelic, Nicole
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Allan, Julia
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Bender, Keith
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Powell, Daniel
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Theodossiou, Ioannis
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January 2022
Andelic, Nicole
271abdfa-45f1-4377-815d-7842b04d8d4c
Allan, Julia
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Bender, Keith
bf2fe2c8-132e-48dc-90e6-804a5650cc44
Powell, Daniel
e1e53a46-a37b-425b-ac15-e82f99033f46
Theodossiou, Ioannis
350adfea-5311-4f53-842a-e7bf0823f479
Andelic, Nicole, Allan, Julia, Bender, Keith, Powell, Daniel and Theodossiou, Ioannis
(2022)
Performance-related pay and objective measures of health after correcting for sample selection
(IZA Discussion Papers, 15000)
29pp.
Record type:
Monograph
(Working Paper)
Abstract
Much of the literature on performance-related pay (PRP) and poor health relies on self reported data, and the relationship is particularly difficult to examine due to confounding variables. To address these limitations we examine three groups of health measures using data from the UKHLS: blood pressure (n=5667), inflammation markers in blood (n=4025) and self-reported health (n=6120). Physiological markers of health allow us to circumvent some of the issues associated with self-reported measures and by using size of firm and % share of PRP workers in occupation we also statistically control for some of the endogeneity associated with self-selection bias. Regressions correcting for self-selection bias and sociodemographic covariates find that PRP contracts are associated with poorer self-reported mental health, higher systolic blood pressure and higher levels of fibrinogen. These findings have implications for firms that use PRP as they may need to implement policies to mitigate against stress.
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dp15000
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Published date: January 2022
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Local EPrints ID: 511512
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/511512
PURE UUID: 8ac56d16-818b-48be-a094-0771f3a5c08a
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Date deposited: 18 May 2026 16:50
Last modified: 19 May 2026 02:13
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Contributors
Author:
Nicole Andelic
Author:
Julia Allan
Author:
Keith Bender
Author:
Daniel Powell
Author:
Ioannis Theodossiou
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