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Fooled by Performance Randomness: Overrewarding Luck

journal contribution
posted on 2019-10-01, 00:00 authored by Romain GauriotRomain Gauriot, L Page
Abstract We provide evidence of a violation of the informativeness principle whereby lucky successes are overly rewarded. We isolate a quasi-experimental situation where the success of an agent is as good as random. To do so, we use high-quality data on football (soccer) matches and select shots on goal that landed on the goal posts. Using nonscoring shots, taken from a similar location on the pitch, as counterfactuals to scoring shots, we estimate the causal effect of a lucky success (goal) on the evaluation of the player's performance. We find clear evidence that luck is overly influencing managers' decisions and evaluators' ratings. Our results suggest that this phenomenon is likely to be widespread in economic organizations.

History

Journal

Review of Economics and Statistics

Volume

101

Pagination

658-666

Location

Cambridge, Mass.

ISSN

0034-6535

eISSN

1530-9142

Language

English

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Issue

4

Publisher

MIT Press Journals