Optimal Team Composition: Diversity to Foster Implicit Team Incentives

Jonathan Glover, Eunhee Kim

Research output: Conference PapersRGC 32 - Refereed conference paper (without host publication)peer-review

Abstract

We study optimal team design. In our model, a principal assigns either heterogeneous agents to a team (a diverse team) or homogenous agents to a team (a specialized team) to perform repeated team production. We assume that specialized teams exhibit a productive substitutability (e.g., interchangeable efforts with decreasing returns to total effort), whereas diverse teams exhibit a productive complementarity (e.g., cross-functional teams). Diverse teams have an inherent advantage in fostering desirable implicit/relational incentives that team members can provide to each other (tacit cooperation). In contrast, specialization both complicates the provision of cooperative incentives by altering the punishment agents can impose on each other for short expected career horizons and fosters undesirable implicit incentives (tacit collusion) for long expected horizons. As a result, expected compensation is first decreasing and then increasing in the discount factor for specialized teams, while expected compensation is always decreasing in the discount factor for diverse teams. We use our results to develop empirical implications about the association between team tenure and team composition, pay-for-performance sensitivity, and team culture.
Original languageEnglish
Publication statusPublished - 19 Jun 2020
Event24th Annual Conference of the Society for Institutional & Organizational Economics (SIOE 2020) - Massachusetts Institute of Technology (Online), Cambridge, MA, United States
Duration: 18 Jun 202020 Jun 2020
https://www.sioe.org/conference/2020

Conference

Conference24th Annual Conference of the Society for Institutional & Organizational Economics (SIOE 2020)
Abbreviated titleSIOE 2020
PlaceUnited States
CityCambridge, MA
Period18/06/2020/06/20
Internet address

Bibliographical note

Research Unit(s) information for this publication is provided by the author(s) concerned.

Research Keywords

  • team composition
  • assignment problem
  • cooperation
  • collusion
  • team diversity

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