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Incentives for Helping on the Job: Theory and Evidence
Author(s) -
Robert Drago,
G. T. Garvey
Publication year - 1998
Publication title -
journal of labor economics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 8.184
H-Index - 109
eISSN - 1537-5307
pISSN - 0734-306X
DOI - 10.1086/209880
Subject(s) - incentive , variety (cybernetics) , promotion (chess) , profit sharing , affect (linguistics) , compensation (psychology) , job enrichment , task (project management) , profit (economics) , business , public economics , labour economics , marketing , economics , public relations , job design , microeconomics , psychology , job satisfaction , job performance , social psychology , computer science , management , political science , communication , finance , artificial intelligence , politics , law
Recent advances in incentive theory stress the multidimensional nature of agent effort and specifically cases where workers affect one anothers' performance through “helping” efforts. This article models helping efforts as determined by the compensation package and task allocation. The model is tested with Australian evidence on reported helping efforts within work groups. The evidence consistently supports the hypothesis that helping efforts are reduced, while individual efforts are increased, when promotion incentives are strong. Piece rates and profit‐sharing appear to have little effect on helping efforts, while task variety and helping efforts are positively correlated.

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