This paper argues that the prevalence of compensation systems which reward winners without explicitly identifying losers can be rationalized by workers' concern for relative payoffs. If the workers' participation constraints are binding, the firm must compensate its employees for the disutility that they may derive from low status. It follows that profit-maximizing employers may be particularly reluctant to penalize or give poor performance evaluation to employees. The theory also sheds light on many other puzzling features of incentive schemes in practice, such as small salary premia, rat races, job title proliferation, the gender wage gap, the gender/happiness paradox and the widespread use of tournaments as a sorting device
Do employees care about their relative (economic) position among co-workers in an organization? And ...
Firms can motivate workers by offering them social status. Much of the literature argues that a rise...
Scholars in strategy, organizational behavior, and economics have shown increasing interest in the l...
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...
This paper argues that the prevalence of compensation systems which reward winners without explicitl...
The paper revolves around the interaction of three ideas: (1) Because of the nature of some workplac...
The paper shows that coworkers' mutual concern may help explain the puzzling fact that wage premia b...
Following recent empirical evidence which indicates the importance of rank for the determination of...
We use administrative personnel records of a large British financial sector employer to investigate ...
We are studying in this paper an interplay between workers in organizations under the assumption tha...
This paper examines the relationship between workers' productivity and preferred bonus scheme. The d...
Firms can motivate workers by offering them social status (e.g. access to power and privileges) inst...
Following recent empirical evidence which indicates the importance of rank for the determination of ...
This paper characterizes the structure of monetary incentives in an organization with varying differ...
Do employees care about their relative (economic) position among co-workers in an organization? And ...
Firms can motivate workers by offering them social status. Much of the literature argues that a rise...
Scholars in strategy, organizational behavior, and economics have shown increasing interest in the l...
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...
This paper argues that the prevalence of compensation systems which reward winners without explicitl...
The paper revolves around the interaction of three ideas: (1) Because of the nature of some workplac...
The paper shows that coworkers' mutual concern may help explain the puzzling fact that wage premia b...
Following recent empirical evidence which indicates the importance of rank for the determination of...
We use administrative personnel records of a large British financial sector employer to investigate ...
We are studying in this paper an interplay between workers in organizations under the assumption tha...
This paper examines the relationship between workers' productivity and preferred bonus scheme. The d...
Firms can motivate workers by offering them social status (e.g. access to power and privileges) inst...
Following recent empirical evidence which indicates the importance of rank for the determination of ...
This paper characterizes the structure of monetary incentives in an organization with varying differ...
Do employees care about their relative (economic) position among co-workers in an organization? And ...
Firms can motivate workers by offering them social status. Much of the literature argues that a rise...
Scholars in strategy, organizational behavior, and economics have shown increasing interest in the l...