Evaluating Worker Motivation Strategies
A company is concerned that some employees are not putting in their full effort. To motivate its workforce, the firm must ensure that the value of having the job is high enough to outweigh the temptation to slack off. The management team is debating two different strategies to achieve this. Analyze both proposals and determine which one would require the firm to create a larger economic incentive (a higher 'cost of job loss') to keep employees working diligently.
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Social Science
Empirical Science
Science
Economics
Economy
Introduction to Microeconomics Course
CORE Econ
Ch.6 The firm and its employees - The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
Analysis in Bloom's Taxonomy
Cognitive Psychology
Psychology
Related
Perfect Monitoring (s=0) Eliminates the Need for Employment Rent
Decomposition of the No-Shirking Wage
A firm has two types of jobs. Job A involves repetitive, strenuous tasks where it is difficult for a supervisor to observe an individual's moment-to-moment work rate. Job B involves collaborative, engaging tasks where an individual's contribution is immediately obvious to the team. To motivate employees to work diligently, which job would require the firm to create a higher 'cost of job loss' (the economic benefit an employee receives from having the job compared to being unemployed), and why?
Evaluating Worker Motivation Strategies
Impact of Workplace Changes on Employee Motivation
Analyzing Competing Effects on Worker Motivation
A firm understands that to motivate an employee to work hard, the value of keeping their job must outweigh the temptation to slack off. For each scenario, match it with the primary reason why the firm would need to offer a particularly large 'extra benefit' (i.e., a high wage relative to unemployment benefits) to ensure diligence.
A firm that successfully implements a new technology making it easier and faster to monitor employee productivity can reduce the wage it pays to its workers without causing them to shirk, assuming all other factors remain constant.
A company's assembly line work becomes physically more demanding due to a new production process. To prevent workers from reducing their effort, the manager needs to adjust their compensation. Arrange the following statements into the correct logical sequence that explains why a wage increase is necessary to maintain worker diligence.
A manufacturing firm simultaneously introduces two changes. First, it re-engineers its assembly line process, making the work more physically strenuous for its employees. Second, it installs a new, highly effective real-time monitoring system that can almost instantly detect when a worker's pace slows down. Because these two changes have opposing effects on the incentive to work hard, the net impact on the size of the 'cost of job loss' (the wage premium above what workers could get elsewhere) required to motivate employees is ____.
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Evaluating Anti-Shirking Strategies
Analyzing Competing Effects on Worker Motivation