Standard models of promotion tournaments assume that firms can commit to arbitrary tournament prizes. In this paper, a firm's ability to adjust tournament prizes is constrained by the outside labor market, through the wages other firms are willing to offer to the promoted and unpromoted workers. The paper shows that sufficiently patient firms may be able to retain some control over the tournament prizes through a relational contract, but if the firms are competitive, full efficiency does not obtain in equilibrium even for discount factors arbitrarily close to one. Full efficiency, however, may be feasible in firms with supranormal profits (monopolistic firms). The paper also shows that a minimum wage regulation distorts the workers' investm...
In a tournament, a principal sets a prize, and several agents then compete to attain the highest obs...
In a tournament, a principal sets a prize, and several agents then compete to attain the highest obs...
In a tournament, a principal sets a prize, and several agents then compete to attain the highest obs...
As initially formulated in the seminal analysis of Lazear and Rosen (1981), an important perspective...
As initially formulated in the seminal analysis of Lazear and Rosen (1981), an important perspective...
We analyze the optimal design of rank-order tournaments with heterogeneous workers. Iftournament pri...
This paper provides a possible explanation for the empirically observed size-wage effect and inter-i...
Promotion tournaments play an important role for the provision of incentives in firms. We analyze in...
In this analysis I study promotion schemes as human resource management strategies by which the firm...
Rank-order tournament payment schemes are widely adopted by firms and organizations as incentive mec...
Rank-order tournament payment schemes are widely adopted by firms and organizations as incentive mec...
This study aims to empirically examine how establishments employ various tools, including promotion,...
This study aims to empirically examine how establishments employ various tools, including promotion,...
This paper considers a simple promotion tournament model where n workers compete for m vacancies of ...
Tournaments represent an increasingly important component of organizational compensation systems. Wh...
In a tournament, a principal sets a prize, and several agents then compete to attain the highest obs...
In a tournament, a principal sets a prize, and several agents then compete to attain the highest obs...
In a tournament, a principal sets a prize, and several agents then compete to attain the highest obs...
As initially formulated in the seminal analysis of Lazear and Rosen (1981), an important perspective...
As initially formulated in the seminal analysis of Lazear and Rosen (1981), an important perspective...
We analyze the optimal design of rank-order tournaments with heterogeneous workers. Iftournament pri...
This paper provides a possible explanation for the empirically observed size-wage effect and inter-i...
Promotion tournaments play an important role for the provision of incentives in firms. We analyze in...
In this analysis I study promotion schemes as human resource management strategies by which the firm...
Rank-order tournament payment schemes are widely adopted by firms and organizations as incentive mec...
Rank-order tournament payment schemes are widely adopted by firms and organizations as incentive mec...
This study aims to empirically examine how establishments employ various tools, including promotion,...
This study aims to empirically examine how establishments employ various tools, including promotion,...
This paper considers a simple promotion tournament model where n workers compete for m vacancies of ...
Tournaments represent an increasingly important component of organizational compensation systems. Wh...
In a tournament, a principal sets a prize, and several agents then compete to attain the highest obs...
In a tournament, a principal sets a prize, and several agents then compete to attain the highest obs...
In a tournament, a principal sets a prize, and several agents then compete to attain the highest obs...