A perennial problem in executive politics is that agents charged with carrying out tasks have private information about their performance and corresponding incentives to manipulate this information. Conventional wisdom emphasizes external stakeholders as a source of reliable information. I instead focus on agents with competing interests and argue that when officials are subject to a relative performance evaluation metric, governing outcomes that are easily observable by their peers are more likely to be truthfully reported, while other outcomes are likely to be misreported. Using a difference-in-differences design and the varying reporting cost across sectors, combined with an original dataset on workplace accidents in China, I find that incorporating a “death cap” into the workplace safety metric management system has heterogenous effects on reported accidents. While the counts of casualties and accidents dropped by 33.8% and 29.4% respectively, the decline was entirely driven by sectors in which peer monitoring was not feasible. The results highlight the conditions under which agents are restrained by their peers. In contrast to theories that truthful signals occur when interests are aligned or independent oversight is present, intra-agent monitoring can get lower-level agents to reveal more truthful information when alternative mechanisms are weak.
Article navigation
23 August 2023
Research Article|
August 23 2023
Where Are the Missing Dead? How Metrics Management Mitigates Official Data Misreporting in China Available to Purchase
Guoer Liu
Guoer Liu
Department of Political Science, University of Michigan
Ann Arbor, MichiganUSA
Search for other works by this author on:
Online ISSN: 2689-4823
Print ISSN: 2689-4815
© 2023 G. Liu
2023
G. Liu
Licensed re-use rights only
Journal of Political Institutions and Political Economy (2023) 4 (2): 231–258.
Citation
Liu G (2023), "Where Are the Missing Dead? How Metrics Management Mitigates Official Data Misreporting in China". Journal of Political Institutions and Political Economy, Vol. 4 No. 2 pp. 231–258, doi: https://doi.org/10.1561/113.00000077
Download citation file:
18
Views
Suggested Reading
Poison from the dragon's belly: Is China paying too high a price for success?
Strategic Direction (January,2008)
Massification, bureaucratization and questing for “world‐class” status: Higher education in China since the mid‐1990s
International Journal of Educational Management (August,2008)
Agency problems in the private pension system of Turkey: pension sector employee perspectives
Qualitative Research in Financial Markets (August,2022)
Optimizing the distribution of outcomes across multiple levels of subcontracting in construction projects
Engineering, Construction and Architectural Management (September,2023)
Related Chapters
Consistent Estimation and Orthogonality
Missing Data Methods: Cross-sectional Methods and Applications
The Stewardship PLC
Listed Family Companies
Bureaucracy and Hierarchy – what Else!?
Reinventing Hierarchy and Bureaucracy – from the Bureau to Network Organizations
Recommended for you
These recommendations are informed by your reading behaviors and indicated interests.
