This article analyzes the role of competitive compensation schemes (in which pay depends on relative performance) in economies with imperfect information. These compensation schemes have desirable risk, incentive, and flexibility properties; they provide for an automatic adjustment of rewards and incentives in response to common changes in the environment. When environmental uncertainty is large, such schemes are shown to be preferable to individualistic reward structures; in the limit, as the number of contestants becomes large, expected utility may approach the first-best (perfect information) level. We study the design of contests, including the optimal use of prizes versus punishments and absolute versus relative performance standards. ...
When risk-averse agents ’ outputs are correlated, using relative perfor-mance information can improv...
In many economic situations, several principals contract with the same agents sequentially. From obs...
A central tenet of economics is that people respond to incentives. While an appropriately crafted in...
This article analyzes the role of competitive compensation schemes (in which pay depends on relative...
This paper examines the effect of imperfect labor market competition on the efficiency of compensati...
We study all-pay contests under incomplete information where the reward is a function of the contest...
When the performances of agents are correlated (because of a common random component), contracts tha...
When the performances of agents are correlated (because of a common random component) contracts that...
We investigate how different competitive regimes affect the ability to provide incentives based on n...
The relationship between competition and performance-related pay has been analyzed in single-princip...
article published in economics journalContests are situations in which an individual's reward depend...
In a tournament, a principal sets a prize, and several agents then compete to attain the highest obs...
A central tenet of economics is that people respond to incentives. While an appropriately crafted in...
In many contests a subset of contestants is granted preferential treatment which is presumably inten...
A central tenet of economics is that people respond to incentives. While an appropriately crafted in...
When risk-averse agents ’ outputs are correlated, using relative perfor-mance information can improv...
In many economic situations, several principals contract with the same agents sequentially. From obs...
A central tenet of economics is that people respond to incentives. While an appropriately crafted in...
This article analyzes the role of competitive compensation schemes (in which pay depends on relative...
This paper examines the effect of imperfect labor market competition on the efficiency of compensati...
We study all-pay contests under incomplete information where the reward is a function of the contest...
When the performances of agents are correlated (because of a common random component), contracts tha...
When the performances of agents are correlated (because of a common random component) contracts that...
We investigate how different competitive regimes affect the ability to provide incentives based on n...
The relationship between competition and performance-related pay has been analyzed in single-princip...
article published in economics journalContests are situations in which an individual's reward depend...
In a tournament, a principal sets a prize, and several agents then compete to attain the highest obs...
A central tenet of economics is that people respond to incentives. While an appropriately crafted in...
In many contests a subset of contestants is granted preferential treatment which is presumably inten...
A central tenet of economics is that people respond to incentives. While an appropriately crafted in...
When risk-averse agents ’ outputs are correlated, using relative perfor-mance information can improv...
In many economic situations, several principals contract with the same agents sequentially. From obs...
A central tenet of economics is that people respond to incentives. While an appropriately crafted in...