Social Exchange and the Reciprocity Roller Coaster: Evidence from the Life and Death of Virtual Teams

Author:

Hergueux Jérôme12ORCID,Henry Emeric3ORCID,Benkler Yochai24ORCID,Algan Yann3ORCID

Affiliation:

1. French National Center for Scientific Research (CNRS, BETA Laboratory), 67000 Strasbourg, Alsace, France;

2. Berkman Klein Center for Internet & Society at Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02138;

3. Department of Economics, Sciences Po, 75007 Paris, France;

4. Harvard Law School, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02138

Abstract

Organizations are riddled with cooperation problems, that is, instances in which workers need to voluntarily exert effort to achieve efficient collective outcomes. To sustain high levels of cooperation, the experimental literature demonstrates the centrality of reciprocal preferences but has also overlooked some of its negative consequences. In this paper, we ran lab-in-the-field experiments in the context of open-source software development teams to provide the first field evidence that highly reciprocating groups are not necessarily more successful in practice. Instead, the relationship between high reciprocity and performance can be more accurately described as U-shaped. Highly reciprocal teams are generally more likely to fail and only outperform other teams conditional on survival. We use the dynamic structure of our data on field contributions to demonstrate the underlying theoretical mechanism. Reciprocal preferences work as a catalyst at the team level: they reinforce the cooperative equilibrium in good times but also make it harder to recover from a negative signal (the project dies). Our results call into question the idea that strong reciprocity can shield organizations from cooperation breakdowns. Instead, cooperation needs to be dynamically managed through relational contracts.

Publisher

Institute for Operations Research and the Management Sciences (INFORMS)

Subject

Management of Technology and Innovation,Organizational Behavior and Human Resource Management,Strategy and Management

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