A Change Would Do You Good .... An Experimental Study on How to Overcome Coordination Failure in Organizations
Open Access
- 1 May 2006
- journal article
- Published by American Economic Association in American Economic Review
- Vol. 96 (3) , 669-693
- https://doi.org/10.1257/aer.96.3.669
Abstract
We study how financial incentives can be used to overcome a history of coordination failure using controlled laboratory experiments. Subjects' payoffs depend on coordinating at high effort levels. In an initial phase, the benefits of coordination are low, and play typically converges to an inefficient outcome. We then explore varying financial incentives to coordinate at a higher effort level. An increase in the benefits of coordination leads to improved coordination, but large increases have no more impact than small increases. Once subjects have coordinated on a higher effort level, reductions in the incentives to coordinate have little effect on behavior.Keywords
All Related Versions
This publication has 17 references indexed in Scilit:
- Are Two Heads Better Than One? Team versus Individual Play in Signaling GamesAmerican Economic Review, 2005
- The impact of meaningful context on strategic play in signaling gamesJournal of Economic Behavior & Organization, 2003
- Sophisticated Experience-Weighted Attraction Learning and Strategic Teaching in Repeated GamesJournal of Economic Theory, 2002
- Firm‐Wide Incentives and Mutual Monitoring at Continental AirlinesJournal of Labor Economics, 2001
- Optimization Incentives and Coordination Failure in Laboratory Stag Hunt GamesEconometrica, 2001
- Increasing Cooperation in Prisoner's Dilemmas by Establishing a Precedent of Efficiency in Coordination GamesOrganizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes, 2000
- Experience-weighted Attraction Learning in Normal Form GamesEconometrica, 1999
- Start-up costs and pecuniary externalities as barriers to economic developmentJournal of Development Economics, 1996
- Creating Expectational Assets in the Laboratory: Coordination in ‘Weakest-Link’ GamesStrategic Management Journal, 1994
- An “evolutionary” interpretation of Van Huyck, Battalio, and Beil's experimental results on coordinationGames and Economic Behavior, 1991