1 / 14

Introduction

Employee Screening: Theory and Evidence Fali Huang Peter Cappelli SESS, SMU Wharton, UPenn Dec. 18, 2006. Introduction. To elicit effort from employees when effort is difficult to observe, a firm may screen job candidates carefully to select workers with intrinsic motivation, or

oberon
Download Presentation

Introduction

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Employee Screening: Theory and EvidenceFali Huang Peter Cappelli SESS, SMU Wharton, UPenn Dec. 18, 2006

  2. Introduction To elicit effort from employees when effort is difficult to observe, a firm may • screen job candidates carefully to select workers with intrinsic motivation, or • monitor employees intensively to prevent shirking. 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.

  3. Contributions to Related Literature • Personnel economics High-performance work practices are associated with less monitoring, but screening is often neglected in the literature. Holmstrom and Milgrom 1991; Ichniowski, Shaw, and Prennushi 1997. Cappelli and Newmark (2001). • Social Preferences Workers with higher intrinsic motivation make extra effort and receive higher wages. But this has not been tested on any national sample of firms. Gift exchange (Akerlof 1982); organization identity (Akerlof and Kranton 2005).

  4. Model: Production and Monitoring • A continuum of principals and agents with equal mass. • Production function: making effort shirking Prob. of producing hp q Prob. of producing 01-p 1-q Cost of effort c. • Making effort is socially optimal: hp-c > hq. • Monitoring: monitoring intensity: Shirking is caught by principal with prob. Total monitoring cost:

  5. Heterogeneous Agents and Screening • Agents differ in conscientious levels: A cooperative type agent has conscientiousness > 0: he feels guilty of the amount if he shirks. A selfish type agent has zero conscientiousness. • The proportion of cooperative types is ρ∈(0,1). • Screening: Prob (detecting a selfish type agent) = r ∈(0,1); Prob (detecting a cooperative type agent) = 1. Screening principal hires the 1st agent perceived to be coop. Prob (a hired agent is cooperative type):

  6. Wage and Utility • The wage for an agent with is • Utility function: Baseline Wage Incentive Pay Make effort if

  7. Timeline Package Choice Matching Screen Effort Choice Monitor Agents apply for jobs at their preferred principals. Principals screen job candidates, hire the first one perceived cooperative, rejects others. Agents consume the base wage, choose to make effort or shirk. Principals monitor, not pay incentive wage if shirking detected. Incentive package announced. Equilibrium: Principals max profit, Agents max utility, Market clear.

  8. The Equilibrium Proposition. (1) In the equilibrium, a proportion of principals screen job candidates with intensity , while others do not screen. The optimal solution is uniquely determined, where The optimal wages are (2) Both types of agents prefer to work for screening principals. A cooperative type agent makes effort while a selfish one shirks if hired by a screening principal, while neither shirks under a non-screening principal.

  9. NES97 data • The data come from establishment‑level surveys of employment practices conducted by the U.S. Bureau of the Census in 1997 for the National Center on the Educational Quality of the Workforce. • It is a nationally representative sample of private establishments with more than 20 employees. • It appears to be the best data available In terms of representativeness, response rate, and breadth of questions about work practices and organizational characteristics.

  10. Variable Selections • The screening selectivity is measured by two variables: Candidates#: The number of candidates interviewed for the job opening of a typical production employee; about 90% of the firms interview between 2 and 10 candidates, while the mean is 7 (SD 8). Attitude Screening:The importance of a candidate’s attitude (mean 4.4 out of 5) in hiring decision, or the average of the importance of attitude and communication skills (mean 4.1). • The monitoring intensity is measured negatively by Employee-Supervisor Ratio: mean 19 (SD 21) Teamwork: Percent of production employees in teamwork (16%)

  11. Control Variables

  12. Table 2: The Trade-Off between Screening and Monitoring

  13. Table 3: Wages and Screening Selectivity

  14. Concluding Remarks • We analyze the relationship between screening selectivity and monitoring intensity in the context of a principal-agent model and test the theoretical results using a national sample of U.S. establishments. • We found a substitution relationship between screening selectivity in work ethic and monitoring intensity, and a complementary relationship between screening selectivity and high performance work practices (especially teamwork). • High screening selectivity leads to high wages.

More Related