Barigozzi, Francesca ;
Burani, Nadia ;
Raggi, Davide
(2013)
The Lemons Problem in a Labor Market with Intrinsic Motivation: When Higher Salaries Pay Worse Workers.
Bologna:
Dipartimento di Scienze economiche DSE,
p. 40.
DOI
10.6092/unibo/amsacta/3837.
In: Quaderni - Working Paper DSE
(883).
ISSN 2282-6483.
Full text available as:
Abstract
We study the Lemons Problem when workers have private information on both their skills and
their intrinsic motivation for the job offered by firms in the labor market.
We first show that, when workers are motivated, inefficiencies due to adverse selection are mitigated.
More interestingly, depending on the association between productivity and motivation, higher
salaries affect the pool of candidates in three possible ways: they can attract (i) more skilled but less
motivated applicants, as expected; (ii) more skilled and more motivated applicants; (iii) less skilled
and less motivated applicants. The last two counterintuitive effects can only occur when a positive
correlation exists between productivity and motivation.
Our results are relevant in the policy debate on whether it is possible to improve the quality
of workers in vocational markets by changing their wage rate and reconcile the different empirical
evidence provided so far on motivated workers such as public servants, teachers, health professionals
and, politicians.
Abstract
We study the Lemons Problem when workers have private information on both their skills and
their intrinsic motivation for the job offered by firms in the labor market.
We first show that, when workers are motivated, inefficiencies due to adverse selection are mitigated.
More interestingly, depending on the association between productivity and motivation, higher
salaries affect the pool of candidates in three possible ways: they can attract (i) more skilled but less
motivated applicants, as expected; (ii) more skilled and more motivated applicants; (iii) less skilled
and less motivated applicants. The last two counterintuitive effects can only occur when a positive
correlation exists between productivity and motivation.
Our results are relevant in the policy debate on whether it is possible to improve the quality
of workers in vocational markets by changing their wage rate and reconcile the different empirical
evidence provided so far on motivated workers such as public servants, teachers, health professionals
and, politicians.
Document type
Monograph
(Working Paper)
Creators
Keywords
skills, intrinsic motivation, the bidimensional Lemons Problem, labor supply
Subjects
ISSN
2282-6483
DOI
Deposit date
08 Oct 2013 09:09
Last modified
13 Oct 2014 12:33
URI
Other metadata
Document type
Monograph
(Working Paper)
Creators
Keywords
skills, intrinsic motivation, the bidimensional Lemons Problem, labor supply
Subjects
ISSN
2282-6483
DOI
Deposit date
08 Oct 2013 09:09
Last modified
13 Oct 2014 12:33
URI
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