scispace - formally typeset
Open AccessPosted Content

The Tenuous Tradeoff Between Risk and Incentives

Reads0
Chats0
TLDR
In this article, the authors argue that the existing literature fails to account for an important effect of uncertainty on incentives through the allocation of responsibility to employees, and they argue that parts of the existing empirical literature are better explained through this lens than with the standard model.
Abstract
Empirical work testing for a negative tradeoff between risk and incentives, a cornerstone of agency theory, has not had much success. Indeed, the data seem to suggest a positive relationship between measures of uncertainty and incentives, rather than the posited negative tradeoff. I argue that the existing literature fails to account for an important effect of uncertainty on incentives through the allocation of responsibility to employees. When workers operate in certain settings, the activities that they should engage in are well known, and firms are content to assign tasks to workers and monitor their inputs. By contrast, when the situation is more uncertain, firms know less about how workers should be spending their time. As a result, the delegate responsibility to workers but, to constraint heir discretion, base compensation on observed output. Hence, uncertainty and output-based pay are positively related. I argue that parts of the existing empirical literature are better explained through this lens than with the standard model.

read more

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Mobile Information Technologies and Firm Performance: The Role of Employee Autonomy

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigate whether the returns to mobile information and communication technology (ICT) in the workplace are contingent on granting employees autonomy over the structure of their workday through trust-based work time arrangements.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Temporal Structure of Equity Compensation

TL;DR: In this paper, the temporal structure of optimal equity incentives differs amongst industrial and financial firms with high implicit leverage through deposit-taking and an one-size-fits-all approach to managerial compensation across firm-types is not optimal.
Journal ArticleDOI

Delegation of Decisions About Change in Organizations: The Roles of Competition, Trade, Uncertainty, and Scale

TL;DR: This paper found that delegation of organizational change is more likely in workplaces that: face a competitive product market, export, have predictable demand, are part of a smaller overall organization, and have fewer workplaces in the firm producing the same output.
Journal ArticleDOI

Education and the Allocation of Talent

TL;DR: In this article, performance contracts give a worker incentives to choose the sector where (she believes she is) most productive, and education increases a worker's information capital, through giving the worker information about her abilities, and hence may affect the desired sector or job to work in.
References
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Multitask Principal–Agent Analyses: Incentive Contracts, Asset Ownership, and Job Design

TL;DR: In this article, a principal-agent model that can explain why employment is sometimes superior to independent contracting even when there are no productive advantages to specific physical or human capital and no financial market imperfections to limit the agent's borrowings is presented.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Provision of Incentives in Firms

TL;DR: In this article, a review of existing work on the provision of incentives for workers is presented, and the authors evaluate this literature in the light of a growing empirical literature on compensation from two perspectives: first, an underlying assumption of this literature is that individuals respond to contracts that reward performance.
Journal ArticleDOI

Formal and Real Authority in Organizations

TL;DR: In this article, the authors developed a theory of the allocation of formal authority and real authority within organizations, and illustrated how a formally integrated structure can accommodate various degrees of "real" integration.
Book ChapterDOI

An analysis of the principal-agent problem

TL;DR: In this article, the authors show that the optimal way of implementing an action by an agent can be found by solving a convex programming problem, and they use this to characterize the optimal incentive scheme and to analyze the determinants of the seriousness of an incentive problem.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Use of Equity Grants to Manage Optimal Equity Incentive Levels

TL;DR: In this article, the authors predict that firms use annual grants of options and restricted stock to CEOs to manage the optimal level of equity incentives, and use the residuals from this model to measure deviations between CEOs’ holdings of equity incentive and optimal levels.
Related Papers (5)