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Public-Sector Personnel Economics: Wages, Promotions, and the Competence-Control Trade-off

Employee Inter- and Intra-Firm Mobility

ISBN: 978-1-78973-550-5, eISBN: 978-1-78973-549-9

Publication date: 15 July 2020

Abstract

We examine personnel policies and careers in public agencies, particularly how wages and promotion standards can partially offset a fundamental contracting problem: the inability of public-sector workers to contract on performance, and the inability of political masters to contract on forbearance from meddling. Despite the dual contracting problem, properly constructed personnel policies can encourage intrinsically motivated public-sector employees to invest in expertise, seek promotion, remain in the public sector, and work hard. To do so requires internal personnel policies that sort “slackers” from “zealots.” Personnel policies that accomplish this task are quite different in agencies where acquired expertise has little value in the private sector, and agencies where acquired expertise commands a premium in the private sector. Even with well-designed personnel policies, an inescapable trade-off between political control and expertise acquisition remains.

Citation

Cameron, C.M., de Figueiredo, J.M. and Lewis, D.E. (2020), "Public-Sector Personnel Economics: Wages, Promotions, and the Competence-Control Trade-off", Tzabbar, D. and Cirillo, B. (Ed.) Employee Inter- and Intra-Firm Mobility (Advances in Strategic Management, Vol. 41), Emerald Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. 111-148. https://doi.org/10.1108/S0742-332220200000041007

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

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