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We study how diversity evolves at a firm with entry-level and upper-level employees who vary in ability and “type” (gender or ethnicity). The ability of entry-level employees is increased by mentoring. An employee receives more mentoring when more upper-level employees have the same type. Optimal promotions are biased by type, and this bias may favor either the minority or the majority. We characterize possible steady states, including a “glass ceiling,” where the upper level remains less diverse than the entry level. A firm may have multiple steady states, whereby temporary affirmative-action policies have a long-run impact. (JEL J71, J41, D20)
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Susan Athey
Boston University
Christopher Avery
National Bureau of Economic Research
Peter Zemsky
INSEAD
American Economic Review
Harvard University
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
INSEAD
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Athey et al. (Fri,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a1fd40ea4de9175b7353194 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1257/aer.90.4.765