Increased Transparency in Procurement: The Role of Peer Effects
成果类型:
Article
署名作者:
Beer, Ruth; Rios, Ignacio; Saban, Daniela
署名单位:
City University of New York (CUNY) System; Baruch College (CUNY); University of Texas System; University of Texas Dallas; Stanford University
刊物名称:
MANAGEMENT SCIENCE
ISSN/ISSBN:
0025-1909
DOI:
10.1287/mnsc.2020.3894
发表日期:
2021
页码:
7511-7534
关键词:
Behavioral Operations
TRANSPARENCY
procurement
peer effects
laboratory experiments
摘要:
Motivated by recent initiatives to increase transparency in procurement, we study the effects of disclosing information about previous purchases in a setting where an organization delegates its purchasing decisions to its employees. When employees can use their own discretion, which may be influenced by personal preferences, to select a supplier, the incentives of the employees and the organization may be misaligned. Disclosing information about previous purchasing decisions made by other employees can reduce or exacerbate this misalignment, as peer effects may come into play. To understand the effects of transparency, we introduce a theoretical model that compares employees' actions in two settings: one where employees cannot observe each other's choices and one where they can observe the decision previously made by a peer before making their own. Two behavioral assumptions are central to our model: that employees are heterogeneous in their reciprocity toward their employer, and that they experience peer effects in the form of income inequality aversion toward their peer. As a result, our model predicts the existence of negative spillovers as a reciprocal employee is more likely to choose the expensive supplier (which gives the employee a personal reward) when the employee observes that a peer did so. A laboratory experiment confirms the existence of negative spillovers and the main behavioral mechanisms described in our model. A surprising result not predicted by our theory is that employees whose decisions are observed by their peers are less likely to choose the expensive supplier than the employees in the no-transparency case. We show that observed employees' preferences for compliance with the social norm of appropriate purchasing behavior explain our data well.