This paper examines the relationship between workers' productivity and preferred bonus scheme. The data are from a company where agents work in teams and receive a bonus that depends on individual and team performance. Standard agency theory predicts that workers with productivity below the team average prefer a team bonus, while high‐productivity agents prefer an individual bonus. Risk aversion may temper the taste for individual pay. This model predicts the observed relationship between productivity and bonus preferences very well. There is, however, one pattern that it cannot explain: many low performers—especially men—prefer individual bonuses
Using ten waves (1998-2007) of the British Household Panel Survey (BHPS), this paper investigates th...
In today’s business environment, organizations are addressing numerous competitive challenges throug...
UnrestrictedThis study examines whether the inclusion of social preferences in the assumed utility f...
This paper argues that the prevalence of compensation systems which reward winners without explicitl...
This research has been approved by the case study organisation, who were keen to explore the effecti...
This paper argues that the prevalence of compensation systems which reward winners without explicitl...
This paper investigates the effect of performance feedback on productivity in a company where worker...
An electronic version of the paper may be downloaded • from the SSRN website: www.SSRN.com • ...
This paper argues that the prevalence of compensation systems which reward winners without explicitl...
We present evidence on whether workers have social preferences by comparing workers\u27 productivity...
This paper argues that the prevalence of compensation systems which reward winners without explicitl...
Prior research (Luft 1994) has shown in a between-subjects laboratory setting that individual decisi...
Team incentives are important in many compensation systems that pay workers according to the output ...
Incentive compensation is often characterized by incomplete contracts. In a setting where managers h...
indebted to the management at Safelite Glass Corporation for providing the data on which the empiric...
Using ten waves (1998-2007) of the British Household Panel Survey (BHPS), this paper investigates th...
In today’s business environment, organizations are addressing numerous competitive challenges throug...
UnrestrictedThis study examines whether the inclusion of social preferences in the assumed utility f...
This paper argues that the prevalence of compensation systems which reward winners without explicitl...
This research has been approved by the case study organisation, who were keen to explore the effecti...
This paper argues that the prevalence of compensation systems which reward winners without explicitl...
This paper investigates the effect of performance feedback on productivity in a company where worker...
An electronic version of the paper may be downloaded • from the SSRN website: www.SSRN.com • ...
This paper argues that the prevalence of compensation systems which reward winners without explicitl...
We present evidence on whether workers have social preferences by comparing workers\u27 productivity...
This paper argues that the prevalence of compensation systems which reward winners without explicitl...
Prior research (Luft 1994) has shown in a between-subjects laboratory setting that individual decisi...
Team incentives are important in many compensation systems that pay workers according to the output ...
Incentive compensation is often characterized by incomplete contracts. In a setting where managers h...
indebted to the management at Safelite Glass Corporation for providing the data on which the empiric...
Using ten waves (1998-2007) of the British Household Panel Survey (BHPS), this paper investigates th...
In today’s business environment, organizations are addressing numerous competitive challenges throug...
UnrestrictedThis study examines whether the inclusion of social preferences in the assumed utility f...