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Title: Raiding and Signaling in the


1
Raiding and Signaling in the Academic
Labor Market Timothy Perri
2
INTRODUCTION. ? An inefficiently large level of
research may occur even if research has direct
social value. ? A professor who publishes is
more visible more likely to receive an outside
offer (Siow 1995, 1998). A profs private gain
(a higher wage) may exceed the social gain from
research.
3
? However, a prof may not spend too much time in
research. 1) the more visible a prof, the higher
the wage the university must pay. ? Waldman
(1984) found firms promote an inefficiently
small of individuals. ?Schools may not reward
research enough.
4
2) Suppose more able individuals are also more
capable in research, so publications may signal
a profs productivity lead to raids. ? If a
prof. with an outside offer learns job
satisfaction, S, at a raider, there is an option
value to the prof if S is high---quit,
otherwise stay.
5
? For an individual of type i, option value
the prob. of a quit if raided (pi) ? the
conditional expected job satisfaction of a
quitter ( ).
? Option value is a social gain from signaling
raiding.
6
? Ignore any direct social value from research.
Thus I understate the social gain from
research. ? This is similar to ignoring
any productivity effect of education in the
basic signaling model (Spence, 1974), except one
social gain remains option value.
7
Michael Spence, Nobel laureate in economics 2001.
8
A MODEL. ? U ? university. ? M ? the mkt. (2 ?
universities that bid in Bertrand fashion
for profs). ? 2 types of profs (L H). ?
productivity xi, i L, H xH gt xL. ? M will
bid xH for one believed to be an H.
9
Wage for those who do not signal ? Those who do
not signal are paid xL. WHY? ? Faculty slots are
scarce M will not bid for those not known to
be Hs. ? Also, S may be costly to provide.
10
The quit decision ? An L who mimics an H would
be paid xH by M. ? For signaling to work, we
must make sure an L would not mimic an H. ? Let
S uniformly on -?, ? E(S) 0.
Satisfaction 0 _at_ U. ? Let m ? xH xL.
11
? One who signals will quit if S xH gt wage
offer from U. ? For an L no counteroffer, so
quit if S gt -m (pL prob. quit). ? For an H
counteroffer WC, so quit if S gt WC xH (pH
prob. quit).
12
? If WC gt xL, pH lt pL. ? Assume WC gt xL. ?
Now gt pH gt pL . for
ANY continuous dist. of S. ? Option value is
higher for an H than for an L.
13
prob.
Fig. 1
S
-m
0
WC -xH
14
Assumption One. ?/2 lt m lt ?. ? This ensures pL lt
1 WC gt x.. ? Note. No fundamental results are
changed if pL 1.
15
The optimal counteroffer ? Assume U max. profit
? ?. ? (xH-WC)(1-pH). ? WC xH - ?/2. ?U
does not match outside offer. ? Later the model
will be amended to allow for the possibility WC gt
xH.
16
Signaling ? q of pubs. ? y profs effort
in publishing. ? for an H q by. ?
for an L q y. ? b gt 1.
17
Effort cost for a prof y2. ? For an L,
producing q pubs requires effort q2. ? For an
H, producing q pubs. requires effort q2/b2. ?
A higher b lowers the MC of signaling.
18
Proposition One. Ignoring for now the
possibility of a higher wage preempting
signaling, signaling will always occur, even if
b 1. ? Why can signaling occur even if an L
can produce pubs. at the same cost as an H????
19
? IH net return to signaling for an H. ? IL
net return to signaling for an L. ? As long as
pH lt pL, an H has a higher cutoff of S for
quitting than an L, option value is higher for
an H than for an L. ? IH gt IL for WC gt xL (m gt
?/2) even if b 1.
20
Fig. 1
prob.
S
-m
0
WC -xH
21
Proposition Two. Signaling may be efficient, but
is inefficient unless b is sufficiently larger
than one. ? Cost of signaling. Min level of q,
qR, for which Ls will not mimic Hs is where IL
xL.
22
? If ? gt m (pL lt 1), qR (m?)/2?1/2
?qR/?? gt 0. ? If ? lt m (pL 1), qR
m1/2.
23
Each H spends (qR)2/b2, but has option value pH
. 3?/16. ? If m ? ? (qR?), signaling
is efficient if b gt 2.31. ? If m ? ?/2 (qR?),
signaling is efficient if b gt 1.73.
24
CAN SIGNALING BE PREEMPTED? ? Let U offer WP
xL ? to those who do not signal. ? Since U
can anticipate what H will do, U only offers WP
if it believes WP will deter signaling.
25
Proposition Three. There are some cases when
signaling may (profitably) be preempted, but
only when signaling is inefficient. ? Efficient
signaling occurs if b gt b. ? Signaling is
preempted if b lt b. ? We find b lt b (with
b lt b if there are any Ls in the population).
26
EXTENSIONS. Commitment not to match outside
offers ? Suppose U can commit to only pay xL to
those raided. ? Now an H who signals is raided
is more likely to quit, option value?.
27
prob.
Fig. 1
S
-m
0
WC -xH
28
Proposition Four. A policy of not matching
outside offers makes signaling less likely to be
efficient. ? Now signaling is efficient if b gt
b. However b gt b. ? For b?(b, b,
signaling is not efficient with commitment not
to match, but would otherwise be efficient.
29
? All that occurs with a policy of not matching
counteroffers is pH ?, so ? an Hs option
value ?. ? The social gain from signaling is
lower signaling is less likely to be efficient.
30
Not all who signal are raided Proposition Five.
The condition for signaling to be efficient is
independent of the fraction of those who signal
who are raided. ? Cost (expected) benefit from
signaling are reduced by the same . ? Net
social gain or loss from signaling is lower.
31
Costly turnover ? If turnover is costly ? lt 0
is feasible (due to subsidies) WC xH
(T-?)/2, where T turnover cost per prof _at_
U. ? If T gt ?, WC gt xH.
32
CONCLUSION. ? A prof who signals productivity
via publishing may receive an outside offer,
learns job satisfaction (S) at a raiding
university. ? S is a social benefit of
signaling, so signaling may be efficient.
33
? When it is not efficient, signaling may be
preempted by a higher wage. ? Commitment to not
match outside offers reduces the expected gain
in job satisfaction from those who quit when
raided. ? A direct value for research ? an even
larger probability research would be efficient.
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