Publication | Closed Access
Strike Three: Discrimination, Incentives, and Evaluation
288
Citations
29
References
2011
Year
Labor RelationDiscriminationLawWage DiscriminationBiasStrike ThreeFairness (Computer Systems)Unconscious BiasStatisticsGender DiscriminationLabor ArbitrationPublic PolicyBehavioral SciencesLabor LawSelection BiasEmployment LawRacial/ethnic Prefer EncesLabor PracticesDisparate ImpactLabor RelationsBias DetectionLabor-management NegotiationMajor League BaseballArtsUnemployment
Major League Baseball umpires express their racial/ethnic prefer ences when they evaluate pitchers. Strikes are called less often if the umpire and pitcher do not match race/ethnicity, but mainly where there is little scrutiny of umpires. Pitchers understand the incentives and throw pitches that allow umpires less subjective judgment (e.g., fastballs over home plate) when they anticipate bias. These direct and indirect effects bias performance measures of minorities downward. The results suggest how discrimination alters discriminated groups' behavior generally. They imply that biases in measured productivity must be accounted for in generating measures of wage discrimination. (JEL J15, J31, J44, J71, L83)
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