Cooperation in teams: the role of identity, punishment and endowment distribution
Abstract
Common identity and peer punishment have been identified as important means to reduce free riding and to promote cooperation in teamwork settings. This paper examines the relative importance of these two mechanisms, as well as the importance of income distribution in team cooperation. In a
repeated public good experiment, conditions vary among different combinations of homogenous or heterogeneous endowment, strong or weak identity, and absence or presence of peer punishment. We find that without punishment, strong identity can counteract the negative impact of endowment
heterogeneity on cooperation. Moreover, punishment increases cooperation irrespective of income distribution and identity strength, and cooperation is similar across all treatments with punishment.
These findings provide important implications for management policy makers in organizations:
implementing ex ante income heterogeneity within teams should be done with caution, and a very
strong peer punishment mechanism is more effective in enhancing cooperation over common identity
when both are viable.
Other description
JEL Classification: C91; D63; H41; M54
Collections
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Date
2013-01Author
Weng, Qian
Carlsson, Fredrik
Keywords
endowment distribution
identity
punishment
cooperation
public goods experiment
Publication type
report
ISSN
1403-2465
Series/Report no.
Working Papers in Economics
551
Language
eng