We study the role of status in an experimental Principal-Agent game.Status is awarded to subjects based on either talent or luck. In each randomly matched principal-agent pair, the principal chooses the agent's\ud status-contingent piece rate for a task in which talent matters for performance (an IQ test). We perform the experiment in Cambridge (UK) and\ud in HCMV (Vietnam). We find that in Cambridge piece rate others are significantly higher for high-status agents (only) when status signals talent.\ud However, these higher offers are not payoff-maximizing for the principals.In contrast, Vietnam piece rate offers are significantly higher for high-status\ud agents (only) when status is determined by luck. We explore possible explanations, an...
The paper identifies a condition under which favouritism is beneficial to the principal even when th...
We study the optimal design of organizations under the assumption that agents in a contest care abou...
This paper reports on a two-task principal-agent experiment in which only one task is contractible. ...
We study the role of status in an experimental Principal-Agent game.Status is awarded to subjects ba...
We study the role of status in an experimental Principal-Agent game. Status is awarded to subjects b...
This paper characterizes the structure of monetary incentives in an organization with varying differ...
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...
Consider a principal-agent relationship in which more effort by the agent raises the likelihood of s...
In many economic situations several principals contract with the same agents sequentially. Asymmetri...
The paper identifies conditions under which ‘inefficient’ favouritism emerges as an optimal outcome ...
Consider a principal-agent relationship in which more effort by the agent raises the likelihood of s...
Using a formal principal-agent model, I investigate the relation between monetary gift-exchange and ...
This article identifies some of the major issues that have been examined in the literature on incent...
Working paper GATE 2010-16 ; Working Paper Series qt1vr4g446, Department of Economics, UC Santa Barb...
The paper identifies a condition under which favouritism is beneficial to the principal even when th...
We study the optimal design of organizations under the assumption that agents in a contest care abou...
This paper reports on a two-task principal-agent experiment in which only one task is contractible. ...
We study the role of status in an experimental Principal-Agent game.Status is awarded to subjects ba...
We study the role of status in an experimental Principal-Agent game. Status is awarded to subjects b...
This paper characterizes the structure of monetary incentives in an organization with varying differ...
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...
Consider a principal-agent relationship in which more effort by the agent raises the likelihood of s...
In many economic situations several principals contract with the same agents sequentially. Asymmetri...
The paper identifies conditions under which ‘inefficient’ favouritism emerges as an optimal outcome ...
Consider a principal-agent relationship in which more effort by the agent raises the likelihood of s...
Using a formal principal-agent model, I investigate the relation between monetary gift-exchange and ...
This article identifies some of the major issues that have been examined in the literature on incent...
Working paper GATE 2010-16 ; Working Paper Series qt1vr4g446, Department of Economics, UC Santa Barb...
The paper identifies a condition under which favouritism is beneficial to the principal even when th...
We study the optimal design of organizations under the assumption that agents in a contest care abou...
This paper reports on a two-task principal-agent experiment in which only one task is contractible. ...