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Multirater Performance Evaluations and Incentives
We compare evaluations of employee performance by individuals and groups of supervisors, analyzing a formal model and running a laboratory experiment. The model predicts that multirater evaluations are more precise than single-rater evaluations if groups rationally aggregate their signals about employee performance. Our controlled laboratory experiment confirms this prediction and finds evidence that this can indeed be attributed to accurate information processing in the group. Moreover, when employee compensation depends on evaluations, multirater evaluations tend to be associated with higher performance.
Closing the Gender Gap in Salary Increases: Evidence from a Field Experiment on Promoting Pay Equity
Lifetime Consequences of Lost Instructional Time in the Classroom: Evidence from Shortened School Years
College Counseling in the Classroom: Randomized Evaluation of a Teacher-Based Approach to College Advising
Interaction of the Labor Market and the Health Insurance System: Employer-Sponsored, Individual, and Public Insurance
Family Resources and Human Capital in the Great Recession
Gender Difference in Innovation Recognition: A Textual Analysis Approach
Prior Work Experience and Entrepreneurship: The Careers of Young Entrepreneurs
Selection into Entrepreneurship, Income Mobility and Firm Performance
Using full-population data from Finland, we show that individuals at the top of the income distribution are significantly more likely to start new incorporated businesses. High-income earners also establish more successful and productive businesses than others. In contrast, parental income is not linked with selection into new entrepreneurship or firm-level outcomes. We find that income gains from entrepreneurship are rather similar across individual and parental characteristics, and that entrepreneurship is associated with upward income mobility regardless of initial income levels. Overall, our findings suggest that entrepreneurship can serve as an upward economic ladder for individuals from diverse backgrounds.