The Hierarchical Structure of the Firm: A Geometric Perspective
Contribuinte(s) |
M. Dungey |
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Data(s) |
01/01/2006
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Resumo |
This paper incorporates hierarchical structure into the neoclassical theory of the firm. Firms are hierarchical in two respects: the organization of workers in production and the wage structure. The firm’s hierarchy is represented as the sector of a circle, where the radius represents the hierarchy’s height, the width of the sector represents the breadth of the hierarchy at a given height, and the angle of the sector represents span of control for any given supervisor. A perfectly competitive firm then chooses height and width, as well as capital inputs, in order to maximize profit. We analyze the short run and long run impact of changes in scale economies, input substitutability and input and output prices on the firm’s hierarchical structure. We find that the firm unambiguously becomes more hierarchical as the specialization of its workers increases or as its output price increases relative to input prices. The effect of changes in scale economies is contingent on the output price. The model also brings forth an analysis of wage inequality within the firm, which is found to be independent of technological considerations, and only depends on the firm’s wage schedule. |
Identificador | |
Idioma(s) |
eng |
Publicador |
The Econometric Society |
Palavras-Chave | #Theory of the firm #hierarchical structure #economies of scale #input substitutability #inequality #E1 #720203 Industrial organisations #140104 Microeconomic Theory #150311 Organisational Behaviour |
Tipo |
Conference Paper |