Personalities and public sector performance: evidence from a health experiment in Pakistan

Callen, M.ORCID logo, Gulzar, S., Hasanain, A., Khan, Y. & Rezaee, A. (2018). Personalities and public sector performance: evidence from a health experiment in Pakistan. (NBER Working Paper Series 21180). National Bureau of Economic Research.
Copy

This paper provides evidence that the personalities of policymakers matter for policy. Three results support the relevance of personalities for policy. First, doctors with higher Big Five and Perry Public Sector Motivation scores attend work more and falsify inspection reports less. Second, health inspectors who score higher on these measures exhibit larger treatment responses to increased monitoring. Last, senior health officials with higher personality scores respond more to data on staff absence by compelling better subsequent attendance. These results suggest that interpersonal differences matter are consequential for state performance.

Full text not available from this repository.

Export as

EndNote BibTeX Reference Manager Refer Atom Dublin Core JSON Multiline CSV
Export