Transparency and fairness in organizational decisions: An experimental investigation using the paired ultimatum game
Organizations often keep secret their decisions about what employees receive (e.g., salary, budgets, benefits) to manage fairness concerns. We propose that this can be counterproductive because of a mechanism we call the “escalation of deservingness under secrecy”, where the existence of peers can i...
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sg-smu-ink.lkcsb_research-75252024-02-16T01:20:42Z Transparency and fairness in organizational decisions: An experimental investigation using the paired ultimatum game NAI, Jared KOTHA, Reddi PURANAM, Phanish Organizations often keep secret their decisions about what employees receive (e.g., salary, budgets, benefits) to manage fairness concerns. We propose that this can be counterproductive because of a mechanism we call the “escalation of deservingness under secrecy”, where the existence of peers can inflate one’s own sense of deservingness, even when the actual allocations to peers are unknown. Building on the ultimatum game, we developed a Paired Ultimatum Game (PUG) in which a player and a peer respondent engage with the same offeror simultaneously but with no direct competition between respondents. Across three experiments- a live interaction study as well as two scenario studies- using the PUG, we analyze the conditions under which transparency may be better than secrecy in preventing the escalation of deservingness perceptions. 2020-06-01T07:00:00Z text application/pdf https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/lkcsb_research/6526 info:doi/10.1287/stsc.2019.0100 https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/context/lkcsb_research/article/7525/viewcontent/SS_Manuscript_Final.pdf http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ Research Collection Lee Kong Chian School Of Business eng Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University Organizational Behavior and Theory Strategic Management Policy |
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Organizational Behavior and Theory Strategic Management Policy NAI, Jared KOTHA, Reddi PURANAM, Phanish Transparency and fairness in organizational decisions: An experimental investigation using the paired ultimatum game |
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Organizations often keep secret their decisions about what employees receive (e.g., salary, budgets, benefits) to manage fairness concerns. We propose that this can be counterproductive because of a mechanism we call the “escalation of deservingness under secrecy”, where the existence of peers can inflate one’s own sense of deservingness, even when the actual allocations to peers are unknown. Building on the ultimatum game, we developed a Paired Ultimatum Game (PUG) in which a player and a peer respondent engage with the same offeror simultaneously but with no direct competition between respondents. Across three experiments- a live interaction study as well as two scenario studies- using the PUG, we analyze the conditions under which transparency may be better than secrecy in preventing the escalation of deservingness perceptions. |
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NAI, Jared KOTHA, Reddi PURANAM, Phanish |
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NAI, Jared KOTHA, Reddi PURANAM, Phanish |
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NAI, Jared |
title |
Transparency and fairness in organizational decisions: An experimental investigation using the paired ultimatum game |
title_short |
Transparency and fairness in organizational decisions: An experimental investigation using the paired ultimatum game |
title_full |
Transparency and fairness in organizational decisions: An experimental investigation using the paired ultimatum game |
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Transparency and fairness in organizational decisions: An experimental investigation using the paired ultimatum game |
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Transparency and fairness in organizational decisions: An experimental investigation using the paired ultimatum game |
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transparency and fairness in organizational decisions: an experimental investigation using the paired ultimatum game |
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Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University |
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2020 |
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https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/lkcsb_research/6526 https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/context/lkcsb_research/article/7525/viewcontent/SS_Manuscript_Final.pdf |
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