Publication Type

Working Paper

Version

publishedVersion

Publication Date

3-2006

Abstract

Arguably the fundamental problem faced by employers is how to elicit effort from employees. Most models suggest that employers meet this challenge by monitoring employees carefully to prevent shirking. But there is another option that relies on heterogeneity across employees, and that is to screen job candidates to find workers with a stronger work ethic who require less monitoring. This should be especially useful in work systems where monitoring by supervisors is more difficult, such as teamwork systems. We analyze the relationship between screening and monitoring in the context of a principal-agent model and test the theoretical results using a national sample of U.S. establishments, which includes information on employee selection. We find that employers screen applicants more intensively for work ethic where they make greater use of systems such as teamwork where monitoring is more difficult. This screening is also associated with higher productivity and higher wages and benefits, as predicted by the theory: The synergies between reduced monitoring costs and high performance work systems enable the firm to pay higher wages to attract and retain such workers. Screening for other attributes, such as cognitive ability, does not produce these results.

Discipline

Labor Economics

Research Areas

Applied Microeconomics

Volume

11-2006

First Page

1

Last Page

34

Publisher

SMU Economics and Statistics Working Paper Series, No. 11-2006

City or Country

Singapore

Copyright Owner and License

Authors

Comments

Under review as NBER Working Paper No. 12071

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