Who attract the public sector compensation schemes?: evidence from Latin America
Resumen
Compensation schemes tend to differ markedly between public and private sector jobs, which can affect the relative preferences of potential employees towards those jobs. We explore this through two informational experiments embedded within a large household survey in ten Latin American cities. We focus on two of the most relevant features of compensation schemes: the wage level and the existence of pay-for-performance. We find that the common characteristics of public sector contracts—i.e. flat wages, a negative wage gap with respect to the private sector in the upper end of the distribution, and a low prevalence of payfor- performance rules—diminishes the attractiveness of public employment among high-performing, high-ability individuals.
Materia
Country / Region
Fecha
2021-12-22Cite this publication
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemItems Relacionados
Public-Private Partnership in Latin America. Learning from experience
In recent decades, many Latin American countries have launched public-private partnership models for the construction, maintenance and operation of ...
Optimal age-dependent taxation in emerging markets: A quantitative assessment
This paper studies the design and welfare implications of an optimal age-dependent taxation scheme for an emerging economy. The setting is an overlapping ...
The effect of high dismissal protection on bureaucratic turnover and productivity
This paper studies the impact of high dismissal protection on bureaucratic turnover and productivity in the context of public school teachers in Chile. ...