Unfair Pay and Health

Published Online:https://doi.org/10.1287/mnsc.2016.2630

References

  • Abeler J, Altmann S, Kube S, Wibral M (2010) Gift exchange and workers fairness concerns: When equality is unfair. J. Eur. Econom. Assoc. 8(6):1299–1324.CrossrefGoogle Scholar
  • Agell J, Lundborg PA (1995) Theories of pay and unemployment: Survey evidence from Swedish manufacturing firms. Scandinavian J. Econom. 97(2):295–307.CrossrefGoogle Scholar
  • Akerlof GA (1982) Labor contracts as partial gift exchange. Quart. J. Econom. 97(4):543–569.CrossrefGoogle Scholar
  • Angrist JD, Pischke J-S (2009) Mostly Harmless Econometrics: An Empiricist’s Companion (Princeton University Press, Princeton, NJ).CrossrefGoogle Scholar
  • Appelhans BM, Luecken LJ (2006) Heart rate variability as an index of regulated emotional responding. Rev. General Psych. 10(3):229–240.CrossrefGoogle Scholar
  • Bewley TF (1999) Why Wages Don’t Fall During a Recession (Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA).CrossrefGoogle Scholar
  • Bewley TF (2005) Fairness, reciprocity, and wage rigidity. Gintis H, Bowles S, Boyd R, Fehr E, eds. Moral Sentiments and Material Interests: The Foundations of Cooperation in Economic Life (MIT Press, Cambridge, MA), 303–338.Google Scholar
  • Bosma H, Peter R, Siegrist J, Marmot M (1998) Two alternative job stress models and the risk of coronary heart disease. Amer. J. Public Health 88(1):68–74.CrossrefGoogle Scholar
  • Brosschot JF, Thayer JF (2003) Heart rate response is longer after negative emotions than after positive emotions. Internat. J. Psychophysiol. 50(3):181–187.CrossrefGoogle Scholar
  • Card D (1995) Myth and Measurement: The New Economics of the Minimum Wage (Princeton University Press, Princeton, NJ).Google Scholar
  • Charness G, Kuhn P (2011) Lab labor: What can labor economists learn from the lab? Ashenfelter O, Card D, eds. Handbook of Labor Economics, Vol. 4A (Elsevier, Amsterdam), 229–330.CrossrefGoogle Scholar
  • Charness G, Rabin M (2002) Understanding social preferences with simple tests. Quart. J. Econom. 117(3):817–869.CrossrefGoogle Scholar
  • Cohn A, Fehr E, Goette L (2015) Fair wages and effort provision: Combining evidence from the lab and the field. Management Sci. 61(8):1777–1794.LinkGoogle Scholar
  • Currie J, Madrian BC (1999) Health, health insurance, and the labor market. Ashenfelter O, Card D, eds. Handbook of Labor Economics, Vol. 3 (Elsevier, Amsterdam) 3309–3416.Google Scholar
  • Dekker JM, Crow RS, Folsom AR, Hannan PJ, Liao D, Swenne, CA, Schouten EG (2000) Low heart rate variability in a 2-minute rhythm strip predicts risk of coronary heart disease and mortality from several causes: The ARIC study. Circulation 102(11):1239–1244.CrossrefGoogle Scholar
  • Dulleck U, Schaffner M, Torgler B (2014) Heartbeat and economic decisions: Observing mental stress among proposers and responders in the ultimatum bargaining game. PLoS ONE 9(9):e108218.CrossrefGoogle Scholar
  • Falk A, Fischbacher U (2006) A theory of reciprocity. Games Econom. Behav. 54(2):293–315.CrossrefGoogle Scholar
  • Falk A, Heckman JJ (2009) Lab experiments are a major source of knowledge in the social sciences. Science 326(5952):535–538.CrossrefGoogle Scholar
  • Falk A, Fehr E, Zehnder C (2006) Fairness perceptions and reservation wages: The behavioral effects of minimum wage laws. Quart. J. Econom. 121(4):1347–1381.Google Scholar
  • Fehr E, Gaechter S (2000) Fairness and retaliation: The economics of reciprocity. J. Econom. Perspect. 14(3):159–181.CrossrefGoogle Scholar
  • Fehr E, Schmidt KM (1999) A theory of fairness, competition, and cooperation. Quart. J. Econom. 114(3):817–868.CrossrefGoogle Scholar
  • Fehr E, Gächter S, Kirchsteiger G (1997) Reciprocity as a contract enforcement device: Experimental evidence. Econometrica 65(4):833–860.CrossrefGoogle Scholar
  • Fehr E, Kirchsteiger G, Riedl A (1993) Does fairness prevent market clearing? An experimental investigation. Quart. J. Econom. 108(2):437–459.CrossrefGoogle Scholar
  • Fischbacher U (2007) z-tree: Zurich toolbox for ready-made economic experiments. Experiment. Econom. 10(2):171–178.CrossrefGoogle Scholar
  • Fliessbach K, Weber B, Trautner P, Dohmen T, Sunde U, Elger CE, Falk A (2007) Social comparison affects reward-related brain activity in the human ventral striatum. Science 318(5854):1305–1308.CrossrefGoogle Scholar
  • Gianaros PJ, Salomon K, Zhou F, Owens JF, Edmundowicz D, Kuller LH, Matthews KA (2005) A greater reduction in high-frequency heart rate variability to a psychological stressor is associated with subclinical coronary and aortic calcification in postmenopausal women. Psychosomatic Medicine 67(4):553–560.CrossrefGoogle Scholar
  • Heikkilä K, Nyberg ST, Theorell T, Fransson EI, Alfredsson L, Bjorner JB, Bonenfant Set al. (2013) Work stress and risk of cancer: Meta-analysis of 5700 incident cancer events in 116 000 European men and women. British Medical J. 346:f165.CrossrefGoogle Scholar
  • Hillebrand S, Gast KB, de Mutsert R, Swenne CA, Jukema JW, Middeldorp S, Rosendaal FR, Dekkers OM (2013) Heart rate variability and first cardiovascular event in populations without known cardiovascular disease: Meta-analysis and dose–response meta-regression. europace 15(5):742–749.CrossrefGoogle Scholar
  • Jarczok MN, Jarczok M, Mauss D, Koenig J, Li J, Herr RM, Thayer JF (2013) Autonomic nervous system activity and workplace stressors: A systematic review. Neurosci. Biobehav. Rev. 37(8):1810–1823.CrossrefGoogle Scholar
  • Katz L, Krueger A (1992) The effect of the minimum wage on the fast-food industry. Indust. Labor Relations Rev. 46(1):6–21.CrossrefGoogle Scholar
  • Kennedy BP, Kawachi I, Prothrow-Stith D (1996) Income distribution and mortality: Cross sectional ecological study of the Robin Hood Index in the United States. British Medical J. 312(7037):1004–1007.CrossrefGoogle Scholar
  • Kivimäki M, Leino-Arjas P, Luukkonen R, Riihimaeki H, Vahtera J, Kirjonen J (2002) Work stress and risk of cardiovascular mortality: Prospective cohort study of industrial employees. British Medical J. 325(7369):7857.CrossrefGoogle Scholar
  • Kreibig SD (2010) Autonomic nervous system activity in emotion: A review. Biological Psych. 84(3):394–421.CrossrefGoogle Scholar
  • Kube S, Maréchal MA, Puppe C (2012) The currency of reciprocity: Gift exchange in the workplace. Amer. Econom. Rev. 102(4):1644–1662.CrossrefGoogle Scholar
  • Kuper H, Singh-Manoux A, Siegrist J, Marmot M (2002) When reciprocity fails: Effort–reward imbalance in relation to coronary heart disease and health functioning within the Whitehall II study. Occupational Environment. Medicine 59(11):777–784.CrossrefGoogle Scholar
  • Lewis TT, Cogburn CD, Williams DR (2015) Self-reported experiences of discrimination and health: Scientific advances, ongoing controversies, and emerging issues. Annual Rev. Clinical Psych. 11:407–440.CrossrefGoogle Scholar
  • Liu JLY, Maniadakis N, Gray A, Rayner M (2002) The economic burden of coronary heart disease in the UK. Heart 88(6):597–603.CrossrefGoogle Scholar
  • Lopez AD, Mathers CD, Ezzati M, Jamison DT, Murray CJ (2006) Global Burden of Disease and Risk Factors (The World Bank, Washington DC, and Oxford University Press, New York).CrossrefGoogle Scholar
  • Lynch JW, Kaplan GA, Shema SJ (1997) Cumulative impact of sustained economic hardship on physical, cognitive, psychological, and social functioning. New England J. Medicine 337(26):1889–1895.CrossrefGoogle Scholar
  • McDonough P, Duncan GJ, Williams D, House J (1997) Income dynamics and adult mortality in the United States, 1972 through 1989. Amer. J. Public Health 87(9):1476–1483.CrossrefGoogle Scholar
  • McKenzie D (2012) Beyond baseline and follow-up: The case for more T in experiments. J. Development Econom. 99(2):210–221.CrossrefGoogle Scholar
  • Nickell SJ (1981) Biases in dynamic models with fixed effects. Econometrica 49(6):1417–1426.CrossrefGoogle Scholar
  • Niskanen J-P, Tarvainen MP, Ranta-Aho PO, Karjalainen PA (2004) Software for advanced HRV analysis. Comput. MethodsPrograms Biomedicine 76(1):73–81.CrossrefGoogle Scholar
  • Park G, Van Bavel JJ, Vasey MW, Thayer JF (2013) Cardiac vagal tone predicts attentional engagement to and disengagement from fearful faces. Emotion 13(4):645–656.CrossrefGoogle Scholar
  • Penttilae J, Helminen A, Jartti T, Kuusela T, Huikuri HV, Tulppo MP, Coffeng R, Scheinin H (2001) Time domain, geometrical and frequency domain analysis of cardiac vagal outflow: Effects of various respiratory patterns. Clinical Physiol. 21(3):365–376.CrossrefGoogle Scholar
  • Siegrist J (2005) Social reciprocity and health: New scientific evidence and policy implications. Psychoneuroendocrinol. 30(10):1033–1038.CrossrefGoogle Scholar
  • Steptoe A, Kivimäki M (2012) Stress and cardiovascular disease. Nature Rev. Cardiol. 9(6):360–370.CrossrefGoogle Scholar
  • Steptoe A, Marmot M (2002) The role of psychobiological pathways in socio-economic inequalities in cardiovascular disease risk. Eur. Heart J. 23(1):13–25.CrossrefGoogle Scholar
  • Task Force of the European Society of Cardiology and the North American Society of Pacing and Electrophysiology (1996) Heart rate variability: Standards of measurement, physiological interpretation and clinical use.. Circulation 93(5):1043–1065.CrossrefGoogle Scholar
  • Tsuji H, Larson MG, Venditti FJ, Manders ES, Evans JC, Feldman CL, Levy D (1996) Impact of reduced heart rate variability on risk for cardiac events: The Framingham heart study. Circulation 94(11):2850–2855.CrossrefGoogle Scholar
  • Vermunt R, Steensma H (2003) Physiological relaxation: Stress reduction through fair treatment. Soc. Justice Res. 16(2):135–149.CrossrefGoogle Scholar
  • von Borell E, Langbein J, Després G, Hansen S, Leterrier C, Marchant-Forde J, Marchant-Forde Ret al. (2007) Heart rate variability as a measure of autonomic regulation of cardiac activity for assessing stress and welfare in farm animals: A review. Physiol. Behav. 92(3):293–316.CrossrefGoogle Scholar
  • Wagner GG, Frick JR, Schupp J (2007) The German socio-economic panel study (SOEP): Scope, evolution and enhancements. Schmollers Jahrbuch: J. Appl. Soc. Sci. Stud./Zeitschrift für Wirtschafts-und Sozialwissenschaften 127(1):139–169.Google Scholar
  • Xhyheri B, Manfrini O, Mazzolini M, Pizzi C, Bugiardini R (2012) Heart rate variability today. Progress Cardiovascular Diseases 55(3):321–331.CrossrefGoogle Scholar
INFORMS site uses cookies to store information on your computer. Some are essential to make our site work; Others help us improve the user experience. By using this site, you consent to the placement of these cookies. Please read our Privacy Statement to learn more.