文件大小:未知
级别评定:★★★★★
添加时间:2015-12-14 12:18:53
最后更新:2015-12-14 12:21:48
下载积分:0分 (只有会员文件下载时才需要相应积分验证)
总浏览:
总下载:3
发布人:george15135
Gadi Barlevy, Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago, and Derek Neal, University of Chicago and NBER
Allocating Effort and Talent in Professional Labor Markets
In many professional service firms, new associates work long hours while competing in up-or-out promotion contests. Barlevy and Neal's model explores why these firms require young professionals to take on heavy work loads while facing significant risks of dismissal. The researchers argue that the productivity of skilled partners in professional service firms, e.g. law, consulting, investment banking, public accounting, etc, is quite large relative to the productivity of their peers who are competent and experienced but not well-suited to the partner role. Therefore, these firms adopt personnel policies that facilitate the identification of new partners. In the authors' model, both heavy work loads and up-or-out rules serve this purpose. Market participants learn more about new workers who perform more tasks, and when firms replace experienced associates with new workers, they gain the opportunity to identify talented professionals who will have long careers as partners. Both of these personnel practices are costly. However, when the gains from increasing the number of talented partners exceed these costs, firms employ both practices in tandem. Over time, technological developments and evolving roles for specialists in large professional service firms may have shaped work hours and the degree of adherence to strict up or out rules in specific labor markets. The researchers discuss how their model is able to rationalize these developments, and they also present evidence on life-cycle patterns of hours and earnings among lawyers that support key predictions of the model.