Finding good managers: an econometric case study of a large Japanese auto dealership
Using the personnel and transaction data from a large auto dealership in Japan, this paper discusses the value, incentives, assignments, determinants of performance, and learning of managers. We find that: (1) moving one standard deviation up the distribution of manager fixed effects raises a branch's profit by 9.3%; (2) the relationship between managers' branch assignments and their performance is more consistent with tournament theory rather than screening or learning mechanism; (3) better managers are systematically selected to run less profitable branches; and (4) managers with smaller age difference with subordinates and broader experience tend to perform better.
Year of publication: |
2014-06
|
---|---|
Authors: | Owan, Hideo ; Takahashi, Shingo ; Tsuru, Tsuyoshi ; Uehara, Katsuhito |
Institutions: | Graduate School of International Relations, International University of Japan |
Saved in:
freely available
Saved in favorites
Similar items by person
-
Perceptions to climatic changes and cooperative attitudes toward flood protection in Bangladesh
Takahashi, Shingo, (2014)
-
Multitasking Incentives and Biases in Subjective Performance Evaluation
Takahashi, Shingo, (2014)
-
Finding Good Managers: An Econometric Case Study of a Large Japanese Auto Dealership
Owan, Hideo, (2014)
- More ...