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Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. 11- 1 Topic 6-2. (Ch. 11) Effort, Productivity, and Pay
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Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. 11- 2 Figure 11.1: Two Alternative Divisions of the Surplus
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Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. 11- 3 Implicit Contracts Monitoring is costly needs an implicit contracts: incentive to induce self- monitoring (cf. explicit contract) Should be self-enforcing since it cannot be enforced by legal means Should be incentive compatible: the agreements where is in the best interest of each party to honor the agreement
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Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. 11- 4 Piece Rate Pay Piece rate: according to output Hourly wage: time rate regardless of output Salary / flat rate Piece rate is common where the pace of work is under the control and where it is easy to measure the output If cooperation is important, group incentive is more important. Piece rates are less common in large companies
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Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. 11- 5 Evidences of piece rate Piece rate workers receive higher wage > time rate. Maybe because more able workers chooses job offer that offer piece-rate Wage dispersion: Commissions > time-rate pay Group piece rate < individual piece rate Often regulated by quota by union
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Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. 11- 6 Difficulties of piece rate It is hard to monitor the quality of output in a piece rate plan If employees can determine their own production process, it has perverse incentive (Czech republic doctors case: increased the number of procedures performed)
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Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. 11- 7 Salary Employees maintains a good deal of control over the pace of work Output is difficult to measure The time it will take to complete task is uncertain Incentive for investment in human capital (participate in employer sponsored training program)
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Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. 11- 8 Bonuses, profit sharing, and effort Bonus: extra payments to workers based on assessments of their output (larger portion of payment for some jobs: real estate agencies) Group profit sharing: bonus based on performance of their division or department. Could be seen in more profitable firms.
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Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. 11- 9 Efficiency wages Paying high wages cause workers to provide greater effort (prohibit “shirking”) Absolute wage: nutrition based Relative wage: better paid can get better applicants and less turnover Evidence: Ford motor company $5 pay a day in 1914. Absenteeism 10% 0.5% Shock theory: reduce inefficiency in management
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Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. 11- 10 Job Hierarchies in Pay Job ladders: Port of entry & internal labor market create long term attachment to single employer. Employers need a pay structure 1)Motivate workers to be more productive 2)Encourage workers to leave the firm when their productivity falls short of their wage 3)Provide a way to determine who should move up to the ladder
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Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. 11- 11 Why wages rise by tenure 1)Skill 2)Good match 3)Incentive: delayed payments (ex: pension). Workers receive all benefit by extra effort Evidence: if monitoring is easy less likely to have delayed payments Incentive to cheat for firm? reputation game. Mandatory retirement is an issue
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Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. 11- 12 Figure 11.2: A Compensation Sequencing Scheme to Increase Worker Motivation
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Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. 11- 13 Figure 11.3: Alternative Explanations for the Effect of Job Tenure on Wages
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Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. 11- 14 Tournament and executive pay Winner takes all: only relative output matters. Uncertainty makes the system better. Payoff must be larger if 1) The more competitors 2) Competitors are homogenous 3) Horizon becomes shorter Sabotage: only relative performance matters Evidence: 1)Larger prize better performance 2)The more competitors, the more homogenous workers, the shorter horizons least to better compensation
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Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. 11- 15 Up or out contract Professors or lawyers promotion Firm pay wage regardless effort for given period of time workers do not have any incentive to misrepresent of the productivity given period of time
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Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. 11- 16 Shirking and unemployment How much will employers have to pay so that workers do not shirk? Cost of shirking is losing their job. NSC’ NSC
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Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. 11- 17 More on shirking condition If unemployment insurance goes up, the N (No shirking condition) moves to the left since employers should pay higher wages to induce them not to shirk Evidences -W-W(local average) higher fewer workers are dismissed -Strong negative relationship between local unemployment rate and current wages controlling for other factors
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Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. 11- 18 Efficiency wages and industry wage differentials Earnings differential across industry exist In part because of different skill required or compensating wage differential or existence of unions Controlling for all these the wage differential still exist. Why? Maybe monitoring problems (size differentials)
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Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. 11- 19 Firm size wage differentials Hard to monitor workers in large firms 1)Efficiency wage is smaller for workers with less capital equipment (capital is expensive) 2)Smaller in unionized plants: union rules render monitoring systems 3)Bigger if workers control their own working hours (flexibility)
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Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. 11- 20 Self Employment US: 8%, Greece and Italy:25% Reasons: hard to find regular jobs (rise with recession). Employee-protection regulation. Self monitoring. Sometimes tax evasion.
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Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. 11- 21 Self Employment (cont’d)
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