We explore subjective performance reviews in long-term employment relationships. We show that firms benefit from separating the task of evaluating the worker from the task of paying him. The separation allows the reviewer to better manage the review process, and can, therefore, reward the worker for his good performance with not only a good review contemporaneously, but also a promise of better review in the future. Such reviews spread the reward for the worker’s good performance across time and lower the firm’s maximal temptation to renege on the reward. The manner in which information is managed exhibits patterns consistent with a number of well-documented biases in performance reviews
International audienceAssuming that people care not only about what others do but also on what other...
Many scholars have emphasized the importance of subjective performance evaluations in employment rel...
We study a T-period contracting problem where performance evaluations are subjective and private. We...
We explore subjective performance reviews in long-term employment relationships. We show that firms ...
We explore subjective performance reviews in long-term employment rela-tionships. We show that firms...
We study optimal contracting in a setting where a firm repeatedly interacts with multiple workers, an...
Abstract. Team-based work practices are ubiquitous, and most organizations collect infor-mation abou...
Consider managers evaluating their employees' performances. Should managers justify their subjective...
We study optimal dynamic contracting for a firm with multiple workers where compensation is based on...
Abstract. We study optimal contracting in a setting where a \u85rm repeatedly interacts with multipl...
Relational Contracts as a Foundation for Bonus Pools Abstract: Much of our thinking about (and crit...
While discretionary adjustment is a salient feature of performance evaluation and influences employe...
We study whether organizations that reward individual performance should give autonomy or should con...
We study executive compensation in an environment in which firms compete offering contingent contra...
This paper shows that efficiency of relational contracting can be enhanced by a simple and intuitive...
International audienceAssuming that people care not only about what others do but also on what other...
Many scholars have emphasized the importance of subjective performance evaluations in employment rel...
We study a T-period contracting problem where performance evaluations are subjective and private. We...
We explore subjective performance reviews in long-term employment relationships. We show that firms ...
We explore subjective performance reviews in long-term employment rela-tionships. We show that firms...
We study optimal contracting in a setting where a firm repeatedly interacts with multiple workers, an...
Abstract. Team-based work practices are ubiquitous, and most organizations collect infor-mation abou...
Consider managers evaluating their employees' performances. Should managers justify their subjective...
We study optimal dynamic contracting for a firm with multiple workers where compensation is based on...
Abstract. We study optimal contracting in a setting where a \u85rm repeatedly interacts with multipl...
Relational Contracts as a Foundation for Bonus Pools Abstract: Much of our thinking about (and crit...
While discretionary adjustment is a salient feature of performance evaluation and influences employe...
We study whether organizations that reward individual performance should give autonomy or should con...
We study executive compensation in an environment in which firms compete offering contingent contra...
This paper shows that efficiency of relational contracting can be enhanced by a simple and intuitive...
International audienceAssuming that people care not only about what others do but also on what other...
Many scholars have emphasized the importance of subjective performance evaluations in employment rel...
We study a T-period contracting problem where performance evaluations are subjective and private. We...