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Home | Events Archive | Leveraging Social Comparisons: The Role of Peer Assignment Policies
Seminar

Leveraging Social Comparisons: The Role of Peer Assignment Policies


  • Series
  • Speaker(s)
    Julien Senn (University of Zurich, Switzerland)
  • Field
    Behavioral Economics
  • Location
    University of Amsterdam, Roeterseiland Campus, E0.14
    Amsterdam
  • Date and time

    May 22, 2025
    16:00 - 17:15

Abstract

We explore whether and how different peer assignment mechanisms affect worker performance and stress. Letting individuals choose whom to compare to increases productivity to the same extent as a targeted exogenous matching policy designed to maximize motivational spillovers. These effects are significantly larger than those obtained through random assignment and their magnitude is comparable to the impact of an increase in pay of about 10 percent. A downside of targeted peer assignment is that, unlike endogenous peer selection, it leads to a large increase in stress. The key advantage of letting workers choose whom to compare to is that it allows those workers who want to be motivated to compare to a motivating peer while also permitting those for whom social comparisons have little benefits or are too stressful to avoid them. Finally, we show that social comparisons yield stronger motivational effects than comparable non-social goals. Joint paper with Jan Schmitz and Christian Zehnder