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Does it help to help and to be helped? Impacts of informal help on effort and wages

Author

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  • Rahma Daly
  • Marc-Arthur Diaye
  • Emmanuelle Walkowiak

Abstract

Purpose - The purpose of this paper is to analyse the role of informal help at the workplace and identify its determinants and outcomes. With an agency model, a multidisciplinary framework is proposed to understand how the “managerial” logic that shapes formal communication combines with the social logic underlying informal help in the context of organisational changes. Design/methodology/approach - With a sample of 12,475 employees of the French private sector, switching models estimate the determinants and impacts of informal help on wages and effort. Findings - The results of this paper show that informal help networks reproduce discriminatory stereotypes, and they are driven by the firm’s instability, organisational design of workstation and social mechanisms. When employees help other workers, they intensify their effort. It pays to be helped, as recipients of help receive a wage premium. Results also suggest the existence of free-riding behaviours in informal help when workers do not reciprocate help Originality/value - This approach of work organisation focuses on the analysis of productive interdependencies and social interactions at the workplace. The link between the formal organisation and the informal social structure is analysed with the concept of informal help. It also highlights the social dimension of performance.

Suggested Citation

  • Rahma Daly & Marc-Arthur Diaye & Emmanuelle Walkowiak, 2019. "Does it help to help and to be helped? Impacts of informal help on effort and wages," Journal of Accounting & Organizational Change, Emerald Group Publishing Limited, vol. 15(2), pages 302-329, May.
  • Handle: RePEc:eme:jaocpp:jaoc-03-2018-0031
    DOI: 10.1108/JAOC-03-2018-0031
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