员工犯罪、监控与效率工资假说

W. Dickens, Lawrence F. Katz, K. Lang, L. Summers
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引用次数: 12

摘要

本文对雇员犯罪、犯罪的经济学理论、联系的限制和效率工资假说进行了一些观察。我们证明了最简单的犯罪经济学理论预测利润最大化的公司应该遵循最小监控和大惩罚员工犯罪的策略。我们发现压倒性的经验证据表明,企业花费了相当多的资源来检测员工的渎职行为,并且没有施加非常大的处罚,我们调查了简单模型预测失败的一些可能原因。事实证明,在某些情况下,公司在监控员工方面的巨额支出的合理解释也证明了支付溢价工资的合理性。一旦认识到企业在监控上花费了大量资源,就不应该支付效率工资,这是不合理的先验论点。
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Employee Crime, Monitoring, and the Efficiency Wage Hypothesis
This paper offers some observations on employee crime, economic theories of crime, limits on bonding, and the efficiency wage hypothesis. We demonstrate that the simplest economic theories of crime predict that profit-maximizing firms should follow strategies of minimal monitoring and large penalties for employee crime. Finding overwhelming empirical evidence that firms expend considerable resources trying to detect employee malfeasance and do not impose extremely large penalties, we investigate a number of possible reasons why the simple model's predictions fail. It turns out that plausible explanations for firms large outlays on monitoring of employees also justify the payment of premium wages in some circumstances. There is no legitimate a priori argument that firms should not pay efficiency wages once it is recognized that they expend significant resources on monitoring.
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