Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5066992 | European Economic Review | 2012 | 19 Pages |
Sick pay is a common provision in most labor contracts. This paper employs an experimental gift exchange environment to explore two related questions using both managers and undergraduates as subjects. First, do workers reciprocate generous sick pay with higher effort? Second, do firms benefit from offering sick pay? Our main finding is that workers do reciprocate generous sick pay with higher effort. However, firms benefit from offering sick pay in terms of profits only if there is competition among firms for workers. Consequently, competition leads to a higher voluntary provision of sick pay relative to a monopsonistic labor market.
⺠First experiment on sick pay. ⺠Uses both managers and undergraduates as subjects. ⺠Workers reciprocate generous sick pay with higher effort. ⺠However, firms only benefit from offering sick pay if there is competition among firms for workers.