Human capital and agency theory

John-Christopher Spender

Producció científica: Capítol de llibreCapítol

13 Cites (Scopus)

Resum

This article considers the 'obvious' relationship between human capital (HC) and agency theory (AT) with two goals in mind. First, to show how principal-agent theory (PAT) - the AT variant most understood by agency theory - clarifies HC as a way of describing individuals in the organizational context. Second, to explore how PAT's own shortcomings illuminate possibilities implicit but underexplored in the HC literature; for while a workplace relationship between PAT and HC seems obvious, it is conceptually complicated. The article begins with a review of the two concepts' history and the research programs from which they emerged. After considering the PAT-HC interaction, it shows how HC might contribute to the theory of the firm. Many see the firm as a socioeconomic context in which HC and agency issues collide under management's direction as other forms of capital enter the mix.
Idioma originalAnglès
Títol de la publicacióThe Oxford handbook of human capital
Pàgines186-217
Estat de la publicacióPublicada - 1 de gen. 2011
Publicat externament

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