Gift Exchange and Workers' Fairness Concerns - When Equality Is Unfair
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Gift Exchange and Workers' Fairness Concerns - When Equality Is Unfair. / Abeler, Johannes; Altmann, Steffen; Kube, Sebastian; Wibral, Matthias.
In: Journal of the European Economic Association, Vol. 8, No. 6, 01.12.2010, p. 1299-1324.Research output: Contribution to journal › Journal article › Research › peer-review
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TY - JOUR
T1 - Gift Exchange and Workers' Fairness Concerns - When Equality Is Unfair
AU - Abeler, Johannes
AU - Altmann, Steffen
AU - Kube, Sebastian
AU - Wibral, Matthias
PY - 2010/12/1
Y1 - 2010/12/1
N2 - We study how different payment modes influence the effectiveness of gift exchange as a contract enforcement device. In particular, we analyze how horizontal fairness concerns affect performance and efficiency in an environment characterized by contractual incompleteness. In our experiment, one principal is matched with two agents. The principal pays equal wages in one treatment and can set individual wages in the other. We find that the use of equal wages elicits substantially lower efforts. This is not caused by monetary incentives per se because under both wage schemes it is profit-maximizing for agents to exert high efforts. The treatment difference instead seems to be driven by the fact that the norm of equity is violated far more frequently in the equal wage treatment. After having suffered from violations of the equity principle, agents withdraw effort. These findings hold even after controlling for the role of intentions, as we show in a third treatment. Our results suggest that adherence to the norm of equity is a necessary prerequisite for successful establishment of gift-exchange relations.
AB - We study how different payment modes influence the effectiveness of gift exchange as a contract enforcement device. In particular, we analyze how horizontal fairness concerns affect performance and efficiency in an environment characterized by contractual incompleteness. In our experiment, one principal is matched with two agents. The principal pays equal wages in one treatment and can set individual wages in the other. We find that the use of equal wages elicits substantially lower efforts. This is not caused by monetary incentives per se because under both wage schemes it is profit-maximizing for agents to exert high efforts. The treatment difference instead seems to be driven by the fact that the norm of equity is violated far more frequently in the equal wage treatment. After having suffered from violations of the equity principle, agents withdraw effort. These findings hold even after controlling for the role of intentions, as we show in a third treatment. Our results suggest that adherence to the norm of equity is a necessary prerequisite for successful establishment of gift-exchange relations.
U2 - 10.1162/jeea_a_00026
DO - 10.1162/jeea_a_00026
M3 - Journal article
AN - SCOPUS:78649709019
VL - 8
SP - 1299
EP - 1324
JO - Journal of the European Economic Association
JF - Journal of the European Economic Association
SN - 1542-4774
IS - 6
ER -
ID: 126372937