Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
883423 Journal of Economic Behavior & Organization 2016 16 Pages PDF
Abstract

•We present data from three different experimental treatments.•For all three we find that managers are biased towards employees they hired.•Managers’ and employees’ biases are connected.

In many organizations the measurement of job performance cannot rely on easily quantifiable information. In such cases, supervising managers often use subjective performance evaluations. We use laboratory experiments to study whether the way employees are assigned to a manager affects managers’ and co-employees’ subjective evaluations of employees. Employees can either be hired by the manager, explicitly not hired by him and nevertheless assigned to him or exogenously assigned to him. We present data from three different treatments. For all three treatments we find escalation bias by managers. Managers exhibit a positive bias towards those employees they have hired or a negative one towards those they have explicitly not hired. For three treatments we find that managers’ and employees’ biases are connected. Exogenously assigned employees are biased in favor of employees hired by the manager and against those explicitly not hired.

Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities Economics, Econometrics and Finance Economics and Econometrics
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