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Research ArticleArticle

Peers and Motivation at Work

Evidence from a Firm Experiment in Malawi*

Lasse Brune, Eric Chyn and Jason Kerwin
Published online before print June 10, 2020, 0919-10416R2; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3368/jhr.57.4.0919-10416R2
Lasse Brune
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Eric Chyn
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  • For correspondence: [email protected]
Jason Kerwin
Jason Kerwin is an assistant professor of applied economics at the University of Minnesota and an affiliated professor at J-PAL.
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Abstract

This paper studies workplace peer effects by randomly varying work assignments at a tea estate in Malawi. We find that increasing mean peer ability by 10 percent raises productivity by 0.3 percent. This effect is driven by the responses of women. Neither production nor compensation externalities cause the effect because workers receive piece rates and do not work in teams. Additional analyses provide no support for learning or socialization as mechanisms. Instead, peer effects appear to operate through “motivation”: given the choice to be reassigned, most workers prefer working near high-ability co-workers because these peers motivate them to work harder.

Keywords
  • Peer effects
  • firm productivity
  • field experiment
JEL
  • J24
  • J33
  • M11
  • M54

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Journal of Human Resources: 58 (5)
Journal of Human Resources
Vol. 58, Issue 5
1 Sep 2023
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Peers and Motivation at Work
Lasse Brune, Eric Chyn, Jason Kerwin
Journal of Human Resources Jun 2020, 0919-10416R2; DOI: 10.3368/jhr.57.4.0919-10416R2

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Peers and Motivation at Work
Lasse Brune, Eric Chyn, Jason Kerwin
Journal of Human Resources Jun 2020, 0919-10416R2; DOI: 10.3368/jhr.57.4.0919-10416R2
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Keywords

  • peer effects
  • firm productivity
  • field experiment
  • J24
  • J33
  • M11
  • M54
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