Peer Bargaining and Productivity in Teams: Gender and the Inequitable Division of Pay

被引:12
|
作者
Pierce, Lamar [1 ]
Wang, Laura W. [2 ]
Zhang, Dennis J. [1 ]
机构
[1] Washington Univ, Olin Business Sch, St Louis, MO 63130 USA
[2] Univ Illinois, Gies Coll Business, Champaign, IL 61820 USA
关键词
productivity; bargaining; service operations; gender; negotiation; fairness; compensation; SOCIAL COMPARISONS; UNITED-STATES; PERFORMANCE; INCENTIVES; INEQUALITY; FAIRNESS; IMPACT; WORK; COMPENSATION; NEGOTIATION;
D O I
10.1287/msom.2019.0821
中图分类号
C93 [管理学];
学科分类号
12 ; 1201 ; 1202 ; 120202 ;
摘要
Problem description: A recent trend in personnel operations is to reduce hierarchy and allow employee teams to self-manage tasks, responsibilities, and rewards. Yet, we know little about how this arrangement relates to worker productivity and fairness. Academic/practical relevance: We provide the first firm-based evidence that when service teams are allowed to allocate compensation internally, the ensuing peer-bargaining process can generate inequitable outcomes for women. Methodology: We demonstrate this using fixed-effect models to identify productivity and peer-bargaining traits in 932 workers at 32 large Chinese beauty salons. We measure individual productivity through service and prepaid card sales and measure bargaining through the division of team-based commissions. We also build a parsimonious bargaining model to explain our empirical results. Results: Although productivity and bargaining outcomes are positively correlated, female workers consistently receive bargaining outcomes below their productivity level, whereas men are consistently overcompensated. Importantly, we provide evidence that our results can only be explained by a combination of higher prosociality and lower bargaining power in women. We also demonstrate that the resulting inequity is positively correlated with shorter tenure. Managerial implications: Our findings provide unique organizational evidence on how bargaining among peers relates to productivity in service operations. We show that the discriminatory social dynamics observed throughout society are evident in operational designs that delegate decision rights to teams and that the magnitude in these systems is at least as large as that observed in traditional hierarchical pay systems. Managers must anticipate and mitigate this gender-based inequity because it is in and of itself an operational performance issue, and because of the myriad of productivity, retention, and ethical implications that can result from peer-based bargaining.
引用
收藏
页码:933 / 951
页数:19
相关论文
共 18 条
  • [1] Peer bargaining and productivity in teams: Gender and the inequitable division of pay
    Pierce L.
    Wang L.W.
    Zhang D.J.
    Manufacturing and Service Operations Management, 2021, 23 (04): : 933 - 951
  • [2] Higher research productivity = more pay? Gender pay-for-productivity inequity across disciplines
    Samaniego, Charissa
    Lindner, Peggy
    Kazmi, Maryam A.
    Dirr, Bobbie A.
    Kong, Dejun Tony
    Jeff-Eke, Evonzia
    Spitzmueller, Christiane
    SCIENTOMETRICS, 2023, 128 (02) : 1395 - 1407
  • [3] Higher research productivity = more pay? Gender pay-for-productivity inequity across disciplines
    Charissa Samaniego
    Peggy Lindner
    Maryam A. Kazmi
    Bobbie A. Dirr
    Dejun Tony Kong
    Evonzia Jeff-Eke
    Christiane Spitzmueller
    Scientometrics, 2023, 128 : 1395 - 1407
  • [4] Gender Inequality, Bargaining, and Pay in Care Services in the United States
    Folbre, Nancy
    Gautham, Leila
    Smith, Kristin
    ILR REVIEW, 2023, 76 (01) : 86 - 111
  • [5] Performance Pay and Multidimensional Sorting: Productivity, Preferences, and Gender
    Dohmen, Thomas
    Falk, Armin
    AMERICAN ECONOMIC REVIEW, 2011, 101 (02) : 556 - 590
  • [6] Misperception of peer beliefs reinforces inequitable gender norms among Tanzanian men
    Lawson, David W.
    Chen, Zhian
    Kilgallen, Joseph A.
    Brand, Charlotte O.
    Ishungisa, Alexander M.
    Schaffnit, Susan B.
    Kumogola, Yusufu
    Urassa, Mark
    EVOLUTIONARY HUMAN SCIENCES, 2024, 6
  • [7] PERFORMANCE-RELATED PAY AND FIRM PRODUCTIVITY: EVIDENCE FROM A REFORM IN THE STRUCTURE OF COLLECTIVE BARGAINING
    Lucifora, Claudio
    Origo, Federica
    ILR Review, 2015, 68 (03) : 606 - 632
  • [8] The more the merrier? Exploring the effect of women on boards on the gender pay gap in top management teams
    Raina, Gurdeep Singh
    Sahaym, Arvin
    Sheppard, Leah D.
    JOURNAL OF BUSINESS RESEARCH, 2024, 180
  • [9] The Gender Pay Gap in Italy: Some Evidence on the Role of Decentralized Collective Bargaining
    Gnesi, Chiara
    De Santis, Stefano
    Cardinaleschi, Stefania
    Estudios de Economia Aplicada, 2016, 34 (01): : 109 - 132
  • [10] Bargaining for Pay Equity: An NZ-Inspired Approach to Gender Equality in Australia
    Pennington, Alison
    Wenlock, Megan
    LABOUR & INDUSTRY-A JOURNAL OF THE SOCIAL AND ECONOMIC RELATIONS OF WORK, 2021, 31 (03) : 255 - 264