Standard economic models with complete information predict a positive, monotonic relationship between pay and performance. This prediction does not always hold in experimental tests: offering a small payment may result in lower performance than not offering any payment. We test experimentally two main explanations that have been put forward for this result: the "incomplete contract" hypothesis views the payment rule as a signal given to subjects on purpose of the activity. The "informed principal" hypothesis views it as a signal concerning the characteristics of the agent or of the task. The incomplete contract view appears to offer the best overall explanation for our results. We also find that high-powered monetary incentives do not "crow...
Standard economic thinking postulates that increased monetary incentives should increase performance...
How reversible are incentive systems? – Can firms revert to “trust and reciprocity ” after practici...
Efficiency wage theories argue that firms induce their employees to work in a more disciplined way b...
Standard economic models with complete information predict a positive, monotonic relationship betwee...
This paper attempts to test the non-monotonic effect of monetary incentives on job satisfaction. Sp...
We study a principal-agent framework in which principals can assign wage-irrelevant goals to agents....
We conducted a field experiment in a controlled work environment to investigate the effect of motiva...
Incentive compensation is often characterized by incomplete contracts. While managerial opportunism ...
We examine the effects of endogenous assignment to incentive contracts on worker productivity. Assig...
We present an experimental test of a shirking model where monitoring intensity is endogenous and eff...
People are generally assumed to shy away from activities generating stochastic rewards, thus re-quir...
New research in neuroeconomics suggests that money may be a more powerful motivator than previously ...
Management scholars and economists have recently set out the requirements of a system to elicit good...
Standard economic thinking postulates that increased monetary incentives should increase performance...
How reversible are incentive systems? – Can firms revert to “trust and reciprocity ” after practici...
Efficiency wage theories argue that firms induce their employees to work in a more disciplined way b...
Standard economic models with complete information predict a positive, monotonic relationship betwee...
This paper attempts to test the non-monotonic effect of monetary incentives on job satisfaction. Sp...
We study a principal-agent framework in which principals can assign wage-irrelevant goals to agents....
We conducted a field experiment in a controlled work environment to investigate the effect of motiva...
Incentive compensation is often characterized by incomplete contracts. While managerial opportunism ...
We examine the effects of endogenous assignment to incentive contracts on worker productivity. Assig...
We present an experimental test of a shirking model where monitoring intensity is endogenous and eff...
People are generally assumed to shy away from activities generating stochastic rewards, thus re-quir...
New research in neuroeconomics suggests that money may be a more powerful motivator than previously ...
Management scholars and economists have recently set out the requirements of a system to elicit good...
Standard economic thinking postulates that increased monetary incentives should increase performance...
How reversible are incentive systems? – Can firms revert to “trust and reciprocity ” after practici...
Efficiency wage theories argue that firms induce their employees to work in a more disciplined way b...