This article is concerned with job design, that is, the grouping of tasks into jobs, in teams of risk-neutral homogeneous agents. It shows that when only some tasks are observable by the agents or monitorable by the principal, job design can restrict the set of sequential equilibria to the Pareto optimal one, by making incomplete information from the agents or the principal effective in overcoming coordination failures and conflict among coworkers. Job design is shown to be a constituent part of the overall incentive system, just as efficient compensation rules are. Some criteria for optimal task assignment are derived
Valsecchi, I. (1996). Policing team production through job design. THE JOURNAL OF LAW ECONOMICS & ORGANIZATION, 12(2), 361-375 [10.1093/oxfordjournals.jleo.a023367].
Policing team production through job design
VALSECCHI, IRENE ARMIDA
1996
Abstract
This article is concerned with job design, that is, the grouping of tasks into jobs, in teams of risk-neutral homogeneous agents. It shows that when only some tasks are observable by the agents or monitorable by the principal, job design can restrict the set of sequential equilibria to the Pareto optimal one, by making incomplete information from the agents or the principal effective in overcoming coordination failures and conflict among coworkers. Job design is shown to be a constituent part of the overall incentive system, just as efficient compensation rules are. Some criteria for optimal task assignment are derivedI documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.