This paper characterizes the structure of monetary incentives in an organization with varying differences in employee status. With the help of a moral hazard framework with limited liability we show that for agents with lower outside option increased status leads to lower incentive pay whereas exactly the opposite happens for agents with higher outside option. For agents with very high status such that the limited liability doesn’t bind, an exogenous increase in status level leads to an unambiguous decrease in optimal incentive payment
This paper argues that the prevalence of compensation systems which reward winners without explicitl...
This paper argues that the prevalence of compensation systems which reward winners without explicitl...
Status is greatly valued in the real world, yet it has not received much attention from economic the...
This paper characterizes the structure of monetary incentives in an organization with varying differ...
This paper aims to provide a survey on the studies on incentive, especially non-monetary incentive l...
This paper aims to provide a survey on the studies on incentive, especially non-monetary incentive l...
The paper identifies conditions under which ‘inefficient’ favouritism emerges as an optimal outcome ...
The paper identifies a condition under which favouritism is beneficial to the principal even when th...
The paper introduces status as re ecting an agent's claim to recognition in her work. It is a scarce...
This paper introduces status as reflecting an agent's claim to recognition in her work. This is...
We study the role of status in an experimental Principal-Agent game.Status is awarded to subjects ba...
Following recent empirical evidence which indicates the importance of rank for the determination of...
This thesis investigates the optimal provision of incentives when employment relationships are chara...
This paper argues that the prevalence of compensation systems which reward winners without explicitl...
We introduce, in a multiple agents moral hazard setting, a status variable which reflects an agent’s...
This paper argues that the prevalence of compensation systems which reward winners without explicitl...
This paper argues that the prevalence of compensation systems which reward winners without explicitl...
Status is greatly valued in the real world, yet it has not received much attention from economic the...
This paper characterizes the structure of monetary incentives in an organization with varying differ...
This paper aims to provide a survey on the studies on incentive, especially non-monetary incentive l...
This paper aims to provide a survey on the studies on incentive, especially non-monetary incentive l...
The paper identifies conditions under which ‘inefficient’ favouritism emerges as an optimal outcome ...
The paper identifies a condition under which favouritism is beneficial to the principal even when th...
The paper introduces status as re ecting an agent's claim to recognition in her work. It is a scarce...
This paper introduces status as reflecting an agent's claim to recognition in her work. This is...
We study the role of status in an experimental Principal-Agent game.Status is awarded to subjects ba...
Following recent empirical evidence which indicates the importance of rank for the determination of...
This thesis investigates the optimal provision of incentives when employment relationships are chara...
This paper argues that the prevalence of compensation systems which reward winners without explicitl...
We introduce, in a multiple agents moral hazard setting, a status variable which reflects an agent’s...
This paper argues that the prevalence of compensation systems which reward winners without explicitl...
This paper argues that the prevalence of compensation systems which reward winners without explicitl...
Status is greatly valued in the real world, yet it has not received much attention from economic the...