The notion of "ideal worker" necessitates being available at the discretion of the employer in terms of time. We embed our study in the context of gender. Discretion over working time, meanwhile, is widely considered one of the cornerstones of work-life balance and job satisfaction. We study the pecuniary and social valuation of the autonomy to decide about working schedules. We compare employee-initiated and employer-initiated request for a change towards more flexible working time arrangement. We provide plausibly causal evidence that an \emph{ideal worker} indeed ought to be available, but requesting this availability should be reflected in wage rise on average. There appears to be no penalty to employee-initiated request for flexibility and this result is common for men and women.
Paying for ideal discretion: a framed field experiment on working time arrangements
1. Paying for ideal (discretion):
Paying for ideal (discretion):
an experiment on working time arrangements
M. Smyk & J. Tyrowicz & L. van der Velde
FAME|GRAPE
Warsaw School of Economics, University of Warsaw, University of Regensburg, and IZA
International Centre for Economic Analysis
December 2021
2. Paying for ideal (discretion):
Motivation
The notion of ideal worker
(Davies and Frink 2014, McNall et al. 2009, Guillaume and Pochic 2009, Kauffeld et al. 2004, Batt and Valcour 2003)
Providing flexibility on demand is expected
(Williams 2001, Chung 2020)
Asking for flexibility is penalized (and gendered)
(Vandello et al. 2013, Blair-Loy et al. 2013, Brescoll et al. 2013)
3. Paying for ideal (discretion):
Motivation
The notion of ideal worker
(Davies and Frink 2014, McNall et al. 2009, Guillaume and Pochic 2009, Kauffeld et al. 2004, Batt and Valcour 2003)
Providing flexibility on demand is expected
(Williams 2001, Chung 2020)
Asking for flexibility is penalized (and gendered)
(Vandello et al. 2013, Blair-Loy et al. 2013, Brescoll et al. 2013)
Goldin (2014) conjecture
(Cortes and Pan 2019)
4. Paying for ideal (discretion):
Motivation
The notion of ideal worker
(Davies and Frink 2014, McNall et al. 2009, Guillaume and Pochic 2009, Kauffeld et al. 2004, Batt and Valcour 2003)
Providing flexibility on demand is expected
(Williams 2001, Chung 2020)
Asking for flexibility is penalized (and gendered)
(Vandello et al. 2013, Blair-Loy et al. 2013, Brescoll et al. 2013)
Goldin (2014) conjecture
(Cortes and Pan 2019)
Not a forgone conclusion: worker autonomy
(Hayman 2009, Peters et al. 2009, Shagvaliyeva and Yazdanifard 2014, Angelici and Profeta 2020)
5. Paying for ideal (discretion):
Our contribution
Put ideal worker to a litmus test of pay
We ask
Should ideal worker be rewarded for availability?
Is this premium gender-specific?
6. Paying for ideal (discretion):
Our contribution
Put ideal worker to a litmus test of pay
We ask
Should ideal worker be rewarded for availability?
Is this premium gender-specific?
Field vignette experiment (2 × 2 design) on a change in working time arrangements (WTA)
Vignettes for initiator of change in WTA: employer vs employee
Vignettes for workers: women vs men
7. Paying for ideal (discretion):
Our contribution
Put ideal worker to a litmus test of pay
We ask
Should ideal worker be rewarded for availability?
Is this premium gender-specific?
Field vignette experiment (2 × 2 design) on a change in working time arrangements (WTA)
Vignettes for initiator of change in WTA: employer vs employee
Vignettes for workers: women vs men
Inspect own ability to supply flexibility
Inquire gender norms and FWC/WFC + preference for equality
9. Paying for ideal (discretion):
The vignette experiment
A worker currently works in a regular, fixed schedule, five days a week
Three occupations: hairdresser, lawyer, sales person
Two genders of workers: man or woman
10. Paying for ideal (discretion):
The vignette experiment
A worker currently works in a regular, fixed schedule, five days a week
Three occupations: hairdresser, lawyer, sales person
Two genders of workers: man or woman
Employer OR employee want to change to flexible start / end hours at short notice
11. Paying for ideal (discretion):
The vignette experiment
A worker currently works in a regular, fixed schedule, five days a week
Three occupations: hairdresser, lawyer, sales person
Two genders of workers: man or woman
Employer OR employee want to change to flexible start / end hours at short notice
Within subject: both gender and initiator vary
(all 3 occupations, at least 2 genders and at least 2 initiators)
Between subject: a specific combination out of all possible cases
(3 occupations × 2 genders × 2 initiators = 12)
12. Paying for ideal (discretion):
The vignette experiment
A worker currently works in a regular, fixed schedule, five days a week
Three occupations: hairdresser, lawyer, sales person
Two genders of workers: man or woman
Employer OR employee want to change to flexible start / end hours at short notice
Within subject: both gender and initiator vary
(all 3 occupations, at least 2 genders and at least 2 initiators)
Between subject: a specific combination out of all possible cases
(3 occupations × 2 genders × 2 initiators = 12)
Pay scheme:
small payment for participation
additional pay for completing a second, delayed part of the survey
13. Paying for ideal (discretion):
Elements of the survey
After they complete the vignettes, participants have more questions
Demographics, education, income, managerial experience
Family-work conflict and work-family conflict (Netemeyer et al. 1996)
14. Paying for ideal (discretion):
Elements of the survey
After they complete the vignettes, participants have more questions
Demographics, education, income, managerial experience
Family-work conflict and work-family conflict (Netemeyer et al. 1996)
Valuing own time availability: participants choose when to finish survey
the longer the window, the lower the pay
two choices: wait 5 minutes, or wait 30 minutes
wait time randomly assigned
paid only if compliant with the selected window for the assigned wait time
15. Paying for ideal (discretion):
Elements of the survey
After they complete the vignettes, participants have more questions
Demographics, education, income, managerial experience
Family-work conflict and work-family conflict (Netemeyer et al. 1996)
Valuing own time availability: participants choose when to finish survey
the longer the window, the lower the pay
two choices: wait 5 minutes, or wait 30 minutes
wait time randomly assigned
paid only if compliant with the selected window for the assigned wait time
Gender norms
Aspirations and inequality aversion
16. Paying for ideal (discretion):
Results
The sample
963 vignettes from 321 subjects
49.84% were women, on average 38.5 years, 50% with tertiary education
40% has had managerial (wage barganing) experience
17. Paying for ideal (discretion):
Results
The sample
963 vignettes from 321 subjects
49.84% were women, on average 38.5 years, 50% with tertiary education
40% has had managerial (wage barganing) experience
Manipulation check questions (understanding vignettes)
40% of the subjects fail at least 1 of 9 questions
60% of those fail only 1 question (first)
18. Paying for ideal (discretion):
Results
Treatment effects
Initiator Gender of the character
Employer Employee Diff. Man Woman Diff.
(1) (2) (3) (4) (1)-(3) (1) (2) (3) (4) (1)-(3)
ȳ t-stat ȳ t − stat ȳ t − stat ȳ t − stat
All subjects
in USD / month 28.60 4.75*** 5.895 1.71* 22.70*** 19.86 5.27*** 14.652 2.55** 5.20
in % 3.583 5.84*** 0.642 1.47 2.94*** 2.275 4.48*** 1.944 3.47*** 0.33
Subjects who passed all manipulation checks
in USD / month 29.79 10.31*** 7.441 3.15*** 22.35*** 17.61 6.21*** 19.633 7.50*** -2.02
in % 3.852 9.76*** 0.850 3.92*** 3.00*** 2.335 6.73*** 2.376 7.50*** -0.04
19. Paying for ideal (discretion):
Results
Treatment effects
Initiator Gender of the character
Employer Employee Diff. Man Woman Diff.
(1) (2) (3) (4) (1)-(3) (1) (2) (3) (4) (1)-(3)
ȳ t-stat ȳ t − stat ȳ t − stat ȳ t − stat
All subjects
Negative change 0.027 3.65*** 0.052 5.13*** -0.02* 0.030 3.79*** 0.049 5.02*** -0.02
No change 0.610 27.32*** 0.789 42.53*** -0.18*** 0.712 34.03*** 0.688 32.99*** 0.02
Positive change 0.363 16.51*** 0.159 9.56*** 0.20*** 0.258 12.76*** 0.263 13.27*** -0.01
Subjects who passed all manipulation checks
Negative change 0.000 . 0.025 2.67*** -0.02*** 0.007 1.42 0.017 2.25** -0.01
No change 0.615 21.35*** 0.870 43.47*** -0.25*** 0.754 29.00*** 0.731 28.24*** 0.02
Positive change 0.385 13.35*** 0.106 5.78*** 0.28*** 0.239 9.30*** 0.252 9.93*** -0.01
21. Paying for ideal (discretion):
Other results
Other results
Relevant
Family-work conflict
22. Paying for ideal (discretion):
Other results
Other results
Relevant
Family-work conflict
Not relevant
Own valuation of time flexibility
Gender norms
Inequality aversion
Aspirations related to work and family
23. Paying for ideal (discretion):
Conclusions
Employers should pay for availability
Very robust effects for EMPLOYER treatment
No effects for the gender of the worker, regardless of initiator
These norms do not seem to be mediated by gender beliefs
24. Paying for ideal (discretion):
Conclusions
Employers should pay for availability
Very robust effects for EMPLOYER treatment
No effects for the gender of the worker, regardless of initiator
These norms do not seem to be mediated by gender beliefs
Effects are small (approx. 20$ per month, or 3%)
26. Paying for ideal (discretion):
Conclusions
References I
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27. Paying for ideal (discretion):
Conclusions
References II
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