组织地位竞赛:马太效应与标记效应

Organizing Contests for Status: The Matthew Effect vs. the Mark Effect

Management Science · 2011
被引 125
人大 A+FT50UTD24ABS 4*

中文导读

研究了地位竞赛的最佳设计方式,对比马太效应(资源倾斜精英)与标记效应(资源倾斜边缘者),发现标记效应通常更优,但在小规模或边际成本恒定的竞赛中马太效应更佳。

Abstract

What is the best way to design tournaments for status, in which individuals labor primarily for the esteem of their peers? What process, in other words, should organizers of status-based contests impose upon those who covet peer recognition? We propose a formal model of status-based competition that contrasts two competing alternatives. The first, following Merton, is the “Matthew Effect,” according to which a tournament's architect directs slack resources to elite actors and thus widens the distribution of rewards by favoring cumulative advantage. The second is the “Mark Effect,” under which a tournament's designer instead pushes slack resources to marginal actors and thus tightens the distribution of rewards. Our results suggest that although the Mark Effect is better for the social welfare of most tournaments, the Matthew Effect is preferable in two distinct contexts: in small tournaments where variation in underlying ability translates into acute advantages for the most capable contestants; and in large tournaments whose contestants face constant, rather than rising, marginal costs—a condition we relate to contestants' perception of their work as intrinsically valuable. Our contributions are twofold: We find, counter to the thrust of Merton's work, that cumulative advantage is not invariably optimal for the functioning of status contests; and we identify circumstances in which the production of superstars is likely to make contests for status better off in aggregate. Implications for future research on status and management are discussed. This paper was accepted by Olav Sorenson, organizations and social networks.

地位竞赛组织马太效应马克效应锦标赛设计