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Payoff from Shirking
The payoff from shirking is the total economic benefit an employee anticipates from not exerting effort. The calculation of this payoff is based on a key assumption: that the worker uses an expected duration of s weeks before being detected, which is their best estimate for a chance event. This payoff consists of the full wage (w) for the initial s weeks, plus the lower reservation wage (w_res) for the subsequent h-s weeks of unemployment.
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Introduction to Microeconomics Course
The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
Ch.6 The firm and its employees - The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
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Payoff from Shirking
Impact of Monitoring Difficulty on Shirker Detection Time (s)
Positive Relationship Between Employment Rent, Cost of Effort (c), and Shirking Duration (s)
Evaluating Intertemporal Consumption Choices
A software development company traditionally assessed employee performance through quarterly project reviews. The company now introduces a new system that tracks daily code contributions and flags periods of inactivity. How would this change in monitoring affect the expected time an underperforming employee could remain with the company before their lack of effort is identified?
Analyzing Monitoring Effectiveness in Different Work Environments
The Economic Rationale for Employee Monitoring
A manufacturing plant manager decides to reduce the number of floor supervisors by 50%, reassigning them to other tasks. Assuming no other changes are made to production processes or employee incentives, what is the most likely immediate effect on the expected time a worker who is not exerting full effort can continue before being discovered?
Comparing Shirker Detection Time in Different Job Contexts
An increase in the intensity and effectiveness of an employer's monitoring of employee performance will lead to an increase in the expected time a non-performing employee can remain employed before being identified.
Match each workplace scenario with its most likely impact on the expected time an underperforming employee can remain undetected.
Justifying Investment in Employee Oversight
Strategies to Reduce Shirking Detection Time
The Economic Rationale for Employee Monitoring
Analyzing Monitoring Effectiveness in Different Work Environments
Learn After
Employee's Total Payoff from Shirking
An employee earns a weekly wage of $800. If this employee decides not to exert effort, they estimate they can avoid detection for 5 weeks before being dismissed. After dismissal, their weekly income from alternative sources would be $200. Assuming a total time horizon of 12 weeks from the moment the employee starts shirking, what is the employee's total expected monetary payoff over this 12-week period?
Comparative Analysis of Shirking Payoffs
Deconstructing the Payoff from Shirking
An employee earns a weekly wage and is considering not exerting effort. They estimate they will remain undetected for a certain number of weeks (s) before being dismissed, after which they will receive a lower weekly income for the remainder of a total time horizon (h). According to the standard model for this situation, an increase in the weekly income received after dismissal would decrease the employee's total expected monetary payoff from choosing not to exert effort.
Evaluating the Impact of Unemployment Benefits on Work Incentives
An employee earns a set weekly wage and has an alternative weekly income they could earn if they were to lose their current job. The employee is considering not exerting effort and estimates they can go undetected for a certain number of weeks before being dismissed. The employee's total expected monetary benefit from this course of action is calculated over a fixed total time horizon. If the employer improves its employee supervision methods, making it easier to detect a lack of effort, which component of the employee's total expected benefit calculation is most directly affected?
Calculating the Expected Undetected Period
An employee earns a weekly wage of $1,000. They believe they can avoid exerting effort for 4 weeks before being dismissed. Over a total time horizon of 15 weeks, their total expected monetary benefit from this strategy is calculated to be $5,100. For the 11 weeks after dismissal, their weekly income from other sources must be $____.
An employee is calculating their total potential monetary benefit from not exerting full effort over a specific time horizon. This calculation considers their current wage, the expected duration before this behavior is detected, and the income they would receive after dismissal for the remainder of the time horizon. Match each change in circumstance to its most likely direct effect on this calculated benefit.
Designing an Anti-Shirking Policy