623 research outputs found

    Externalities in Recruiting

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    External recruiting at least weakly improves the quality of the pool of applicants, but the incentive implications are less clear. Using a contest model, this paper investigates the pure incentive effects of external recruiting. Our results show that if workers are heterogeneous, the opening of a firm’s career system may lead to a homogenization of the pool of contestants and, thus, encourage the firm’s high ability workers to exert more effort. If this positive effect outweighs the discouragement of low ability workers, the firm will benefit from external recruiting. If, however, the discouragement effect dominates the homogenization effect, the firm should disregard external recruiting. In addition, product market competition makes opening of the career system less attractive for a firm since it increases the incentives of its competitors’ workers and hence strengthens the competitors

    The Firm as the Locus of Social Comparisons

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    We suggest a parsimonious dynamic agency model in which workers have status concerns. A firm is a promotion hierarchy in which a worker's status depends on past performance. We investigate the optimality of two types of promotion hierarchies: (i) standard promotion practices, where agents have a job guarantee, and (ii) “up-or-out”, in which agents are fired when unsuccessful. We show that up-or-out is optimal if success is difficult to achieve. When success is less hard to achieve, standard promotion practices are optimal provided the payoffs associated with success are moderate. Otherwise, up-or-out is, again, optimal

    Empathy: A clue for prosocialty and driver of indirect reciprocity.

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    Indirect reciprocity has been proposed to explain prosocial behavior among strangers, whereby the prosocial act is returned by a third party. However, what happens if the prosocial act cannot be observed by the third party? Here, we examine whether empathy serves as a clue for prosociality and whether people are more generous toward more empathetic people. In a laboratory study, we measured prosocial behavior as the amount sent in the dictator game and empathy based on the Interpersonal Reactivity Index (IRI). By using an incentivized task, we find that people believe that more empathetic participants send more money in the dictator game. Thus, people see empathy as a clue for prosocial behavior. Furthermore, in a second dictator game, participants indirectly reciprocate by sending more money to more empathetic recipients. Therefore, we suggest that empathy can replace a reputation derived from observable prosocial behavior in triggering indirect reciprocity

    Sich an den Platz der Allerletzten stellen : Lukas 17,7-10 im Kontext von Lukas 17,1-10

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    Die Parabel Lk 17,7–10 wird im Kontext von Lk 17,1–10 sowie im Gegenüber zu Phil 2,6–11 interpretiert. Dabei werden sozialgeschichtliche Fragestellungen ebenso berücksichtigt wie grundlegende hermeneutische Überlegungen zur Gleichnisauslegung. Es kann nicht nur darum gehen, das Gleichnis als einen Aufruf zu einer Demutsübung für Amtsträgerinnen und Amtsträger zu lesen. Vielmehr muss es darum gehen, das Gleichnis als Solidarisierung mit den ausgebeuteten und und entwürdigten Sklavinnen und Sklaven der antiken Gesellschaften wahrzunehmen. Damit wird die Gleichnislektüre zu einer Einübung in die Lebenshaltung und -praxis Jesu (Phil 2,7)
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