TY - JOUR AU - Lazear,Edward P. AU - Shaw,Kathryn L. TI - Personnel Economics: The Economist's View of Human Resources JF - National Bureau of Economic Research Working Paper Series VL - No. 13653 PY - 2007 Y2 - November 2007 UR - http://www.nber.org/papers/w13653 L1 - http://www.nber.org/papers/w13653.pdf N1 - Author contact info: Edward P. Lazear Graduate School of Business and Hoover Institution Stanford University Stanford, CA 94305 Tel: 650/723-9136 Fax: 650/723-0498 E-Mail: lazear@gsb.stanford.edu Kathryn L. Shaw GSB, Littlefield 339 Stanford University Stanford, CA 94305-5015 Tel: 650/725-4168 Fax: 650/725-0468 E-Mail: kathryns@gsb.stanford.edu AB - Personnel economics drills deeply into the firm to study human resource management practices like compensation, hiring practices, training, and teamwork. Many questions are asked. Why should pay vary across workers within firms--and how "compressed" should pay be within firms? Should firms pay workers for their performance on the job or for their skills or hours of work? How are pay and promotions structured across jobs to induce optimal effort from employees? Why do firms use teams and how are teams used most effectively? How should all these human resource management practices, from incentive pay to teamwork, be combined within firms? Personnel economics offers new tools and new answers to these questions. In this paper, we display the tools and principles of personnel economics through a series of models aimed at addressing the questions posed above. We focus on the building blocks that form the foundation of personnel economics: the assumptions that both the worker and the firm are rational maximizing agents; that labor markets and product markets must reach some price-quantity equilibrium; that markets are efficient or that market failures have introduced inefficiencies; and that the use of econometrics and experimental techniques has advanced our ability to identify underlying causal relationships. ER -