Publication | Closed Access
The Dark Side of Competition for Status
480
Citations
83
References
2013
Year
Status AttainmentSocial InfluenceStatus-seeking BehaviorSocial StratificationSocial ChangeOrganizational BehaviorSocial SciencesUnethical BehaviorManagementExperimental EconomicsPerformance RankingOrganizational PsychologyDark SideBehavioral SciencesManipulation (Psychology)Equal OpportunityStatus InconsistencyBehavioral EconomicsProsocial BehaviorIncentive MechanismBusinessPolitical ScienceIncentive Model
Unethical behavior within organizations is not rare. We investigate experimentally the role of status-seeking behavior in sabotage and cheating activities aiming at improving one's performance ranking in a flat-wage environment. We find that average effort is higher when individuals are informed about their relative performance. However, ranking feedback also favors disreputable behavior. Some individuals do not hesitate to incur a cost to improve their rank by sabotaging others' work or by increasing artificially their own performance. Introducing sabotage opportunities has a strong detrimental effect on performance. Therefore, ranking incentives should be used with care. Inducing group identity discourages sabotage among peers but increases in-group rivalry. Data, as supplemental material, are available at http://dx.doi.org/10.1287/mnsc.2013.1747 . This paper was accepted by John List, behavioral economics.
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