This paper investigates managerial discretion in compensation decisions in a team (i.e., joint production) setting. Specifically, we investigate the conditions under which managers tasked with allocating a discretionary bonus pool are willing to incur a personal cost to obtain ex post non-contractible information about the individual effort levels of of team members. Using theory from behavioral economics that incorporates preferences for fairness into the manager’s utility function, we predict and demonstrate experimentally that managers’ willingness to incur such a cost increases as the team’s aggregate performance becomes less extreme (i.e., as the team’s aggregate performance becomes a more noisy measure of individual performance). Furt...
The present study longitudinally assesses fairness allocation rule importance and equity allocation ...
We provide experimental evidence of workers' ingratiation by opinion conformity and of managers' dis...
Consider managers evaluating their employees' performances. Should managers justify their subjective...
This paper investigates managerial discretion in compensation decisions in a team setting, in which ...
Using an experiment, we investigate under which circumstances superiors are willing to incur a perso...
This study investigates whether task interdependence in teams alters the effectiveness of managerial...
This study investigates effects of managerial discretion when employees have to efficiently allocate...
We consider a principal-agent setting in which a manager's compensation depends on a noisy performan...
We consider a principal-agent setting in which a manager’s compensation de- pends on a noisy perform...
Incentive compensation is often characterized by incomplete contracts. In a setting where managers h...
Many scholars have emphasized the importance of subjective performance evaluations in employment rel...
Monitoring by peers in work teams, credit associations, partnerships, local commons situations, and ...
We experimentally study how people resolve a tension between favoritism and fairness when allocating...
Overview of the Four Chapters To advance the literature on subjective performance measurement, this ...
Perceptions of manager discretion in incentive allocation are theoretically and practically importa...
The present study longitudinally assesses fairness allocation rule importance and equity allocation ...
We provide experimental evidence of workers' ingratiation by opinion conformity and of managers' dis...
Consider managers evaluating their employees' performances. Should managers justify their subjective...
This paper investigates managerial discretion in compensation decisions in a team setting, in which ...
Using an experiment, we investigate under which circumstances superiors are willing to incur a perso...
This study investigates whether task interdependence in teams alters the effectiveness of managerial...
This study investigates effects of managerial discretion when employees have to efficiently allocate...
We consider a principal-agent setting in which a manager's compensation depends on a noisy performan...
We consider a principal-agent setting in which a manager’s compensation de- pends on a noisy perform...
Incentive compensation is often characterized by incomplete contracts. In a setting where managers h...
Many scholars have emphasized the importance of subjective performance evaluations in employment rel...
Monitoring by peers in work teams, credit associations, partnerships, local commons situations, and ...
We experimentally study how people resolve a tension between favoritism and fairness when allocating...
Overview of the Four Chapters To advance the literature on subjective performance measurement, this ...
Perceptions of manager discretion in incentive allocation are theoretically and practically importa...
The present study longitudinally assesses fairness allocation rule importance and equity allocation ...
We provide experimental evidence of workers' ingratiation by opinion conformity and of managers' dis...
Consider managers evaluating their employees' performances. Should managers justify their subjective...