Publication | Closed Access
Monitoring, Motivation, and Management: The Determinants of Opportunistic Behavior in a Field Experiment
367
Citations
28
References
2002
Year
Behavioral Decision MakingField ExperimentOpportunistic BehaviorBehavioral AspectDecision ScienceOrganizational BehaviorEmployee AssessmentsManagementExperimental EconomicsBehavioral StrategyWork AttitudeOrganizational PsychologyInduced VariationBehavioral SciencesMotivationBehavioral EconomicsIncentive MechanismBusinessMarginal BenefitsPersonnel EconomicsIncentive Model
Economic models of incentives in employment relationships are based on a specific theory of motivation: employees are “rational cheaters,” who anticipate the consequences of their actions and shirk when the marginal benefits exceed costs. We investigate the “rational cheater model” by observing how experimentally induced variation in monitoring of telephone call center employees influences opportunism. A significant fraction of employees behave as the “rational cheater model” predicts. A substantial proportion of employees, however, do not respond to manipulations in the monitoring rate. This heterogeneity is related to variation in employee assessments of their general treatment by the employer.
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