From Team Spirit to Jealousy: The Pitfalls of Too Much Transparency

Koch, A K and Morgenstern, A

(2005)

Koch, A K and Morgenstern, A (2005) From Team Spirit to Jealousy: The Pitfalls of Too Much Transparency.

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Abstract

Free riding in team production arises because individual effort is not perfectly observable. It seems natural to suppose that greater transparency would enhance incentives. Therefore, it is puzzling that team production often lacks transparency about individual contributions despite negligible costs for providing such information. We offer a rationale for this by demonstrating that transparency can actually hurt incentives. In the presence of career concerns information on the quality of task execution improves incentives while sustaining a cooperative team spirit. In contrast, making the identity of individual contributors observable induces sabotage behavior that looks like jealousy but arises purely from signal jamming by less successful team members. Our results rationalize the conspicuous lack of transparency in team settings with strong career concerns (e.g., co-authorship, architecture, and patent applications) and contribute to explaining the popularity of group incentive schemes in firms.

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This is a Submitted version
This version's date is: 7/2005
This item is not peer reviewed

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https://repository.royalholloway.ac.uk/items/46604ef6-443a-83da-4e1b-221ff9198c91/4/

Item TypeMonograph (Working Paper)
TitleFrom Team Spirit to Jealousy: The Pitfalls of Too Much Transparency
AuthorsKoch, A K
Morgenstern, A
Uncontrolled KeywordsTeams, Reputation, Transparency, Group Incentives, Sabotage
DepartmentsFaculty of History and Social Science\Economics

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Deposited by Research Information System (atira) on 26-Jan-2013 in Royal Holloway Research Online.Last modified on 26-Jan-2013


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