Social distance and delegation: Does anonymity matter?
通过两项实验研究,考察社会距离对委托决策的影响,发现减少社会距离会降低委托意愿,而匿名性对委托概率无显著影响。
Abstract In this paper, we report on two experimental studies that examine the impact of social distance on delegation and uncover the role of anonymity driving delegation in a principal‐agent setting. Study 1 shows that reducing the social distance makes principals less likely to delegate. Study 2 offers evidence that the likelihood of delegation is not affected by whether the principal is informed that the recipients will not find out whether the principal is their friend or a stranger. Our findings have implications for the underlying sources of pro‐sociality in organizational settings where managers make their decisions through hiring external agents.