数量与质量的权衡:激励与监督如何塑造工作中的性别差异

The Quantity-Quality Tradeoff: How Incentives and Monitoring Shape Gender Differences at Work

ORGANIZATION SCIENCE · 2025
被引 0
人大 AFT50UTD24ABS 4*

中文导读

研究美国专利商标局数据发现,生产激励使男性更注重数量而女性更注重质量,加强监督则缩小性别差异,揭示了组织实践对工作性别差异的意外影响。

Abstract

Why do women and men approach the same work differently? Prior research across occupations shows that men tend to emphasize quantity and produce more, whereas women prioritize quality. Researchers have attributed these differences to individual-level factors, such as gender-specific preferences, caregiving responsibilities, and evaluator biases. We propose that organizational practices, specifically production incentives and quality monitoring, also influence these patterns. Using data from the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO), we conceptualize the quantity-quality tradeoff using examiner leniency and leverage discontinuities in incentives and monitoring to assess their effects. We theorize and find that stronger production incentives lead men to be more lenient than women, prioritizing quantity. Under heightened monitoring, women are less lenient than men, emphasizing quality. Further, monitoring moderates the relationship between incentives and gender differences in leniency such that the largest gender gap occurs under strong incentives and weak monitoring. Our study demonstrates that organizational practices interact with worker gender to shape the quantity-quality tradeoff, indicating that incentive and monitoring systems—though not designed to affect gender inequality—produce distinct and unintended effects that are essential to understanding and addressing workplace disparities. Funding: We greatly appreciate funding support from the Gender & Work Initiative at the Johns Hopkins Carey Business School. Supplemental Material: The online appendix is available at https://doi.org/10.1287/orsc.2023.17754 .

组织行为性别差异激励与监督专利审查