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Discrimination as favoritism: The private benefits and social costs of in-group favoritism in an experimental labor market

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TLDR
In this paper, the authors examine labor market favoritism in a unique laboratory experiment design that can shed light on both the private benefits and spillover costs of employer favoritism (or discrimination) and identify one potential micro-foundation of societal unrest that may link back to labor market opportunity.
Abstract
In this paper, we examine labor market favoritism in a unique laboratory experiment design that can shed light on both the private benefits and spillover costs of employer favoritism (or discrimination). Group identity is induced on subjects such that each laboratory « society » consists of eight individuals each belonging to one of two different identity groups. In some treatments randomly assigned employer-subjects give preference rankings of potential worker-subjects who would make effort choices that impact employer payoffs. Though it is common knowledge that group identity in this environment provides no special productivity information and cannot facilitate communication or otherwise lower costs for the employer, employers preferentially rank in-group members. In such instances, the unemployed workers are aware that an intentional preference ranking resulted in their unemployment. Unemployed workers are allowed to destroy resources in a final stage of the game, which is a simple measure of the spillover effects of favoritism in our design. Though we find evidence that favoritism may privately benefit a firm in terms of higher worker effort, the spillover costs that result highlight a reason to combat favoritism/discrimination. This result also identifies one potential micro-foundation of societal unrest that may link back to labor market opportunity. Key Words: Discrimination, Experimental Economics, Social identity, Conflicts

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References
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Maximal quality selection and discrimination in employment

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examine the effect of maximal quality selection on decision-makers' population quality perceptions and find that it perpetuates quality misperceptions even when the minority population is in fact of superior average quality.
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Wages, Employment, and Statistical Discrimination: Evidence from the Laboratory

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examine how varying productivity risk along several dimensions impacts outcomes across worker groups and find evidence for statistical wage discrimination against workers with identical expected productivity but higher productivity variance, suggesting that employers view hiring choice and wage contracts as substitutable.
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Do discriminatory pay regimes unleash antisocial behavior

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors analyze how pay-regime procedures affect antisocial behavior at the workplace and find that low-income workers destroy significantly more canteen vouchers than high-income employees.
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