Publication | Closed Access
Partial Gift Exchange in an Experimental Labor Market: Impact of Subject Population Differences, Productivity Differences, and Effort Requests on Behavior
247
Citations
23
References
2002
Year
Experimental Labor MarketBehavioral Decision MakingField ExperimentLabor Market ParticipationPartial Gift ExchangeManagementExperimental EconomicsEconomic AnalysisRemuneration PracticeEconomicsBehavioral SciencesSubject Population DifferencesGift Exchange ExperimentLabor EconomicsBehavioral EconomicsWage OffersIncentive MechanismSocial BehaviorBusinessGift Exchange HypothesisPersonnel EconomicsIncentive Model
We report a gift exchange experiment. Firms make wage offers; workers respond by determining an effort level. Higher effort is more costly to workers, and firms have no mechanism for punishing or rewarding workers. Consistent with the gift exchange hypothesis, workers provide more effort at higher wages, but undergraduates provide substantially less effort than MBAs. Evidence suggests this results from differences in prior work experience. Firms' nonbinding effort requests are at least partially honored, resulting in increased overall effort for undergraduates. Although higher wages are relatively more costly for lower productivity firms, workers do not provide them with more effort.
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