Adding Behavioral Economics Field Experiments to the Industry Studies Toolkit: Predicting Truck Driver Job Exits in a High Turnover Setting

The Truckers and Turnover Project is an intensive case study of a single firm and its employees which matches proprietary personnel and operational data to new information collected by the researchers to create a two-year panel study of a large subset of new hires. The project’s most distinctive innovation is the data collection process, which combines traditional survey instruments with behavioral economics experiments used to measure individual participant characteristics. The survey data include information on demographics, risk and loss aversion, time preference, planning, non-verbal IQ, and the MPQ personality profile. The data collected by behavioral economics experiments include risk and loss aversion, time preferences (discount rates), backward induction ability, patience, and the preference for cooperation in a social dilemma setting. Subjects are being followed over two years of their work lives. Among the major design goals are to discover the extent to which the survey and experimental measures are correlated, and whether and how much predictive power, with respect to key on-the-job outcome variables, is added by the behavioral measures. The panel study of new hires is being carried out against the backdrop of a second research component, the development of a more conventional in-depth statistical case study of the cooperating firm and its employees. This is a high-turnover service industry setting, and the focus is on the use of survival analysis to model the flow of new employees into and out of employment, and on the correct estimation of the tenure-productivity curve for new hires, accounting for the selection effects of the high turnover.

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