Working paper/research report

Incentive schemes, private information and the double-edged role of competition for agents


Authors listBannier, Christina; Feess, Eberhard; Packham, Natalie; Walzl, Markus

Publication year2016

URLhttps://hdl.handle.net/10419/146137

Title of seriesWorking Papers in Economics and Statistics

Number in series2016, 20


Abstract

This paper examines the effect of imperfect labor market competition on the efficiency of compensation schemes in a setting with moral hazard and risk-averse agents, who have private information on their productivity. Two vertically differentiated firms compete for agents by offering contracts with fixed and variable payments. The superior firm employs both agent types in equilibrium, but the competitive pressure exerted by the inferior firm has a strong impact on contract design: For high degrees of vertical differentiation, i.e. low competition, low-ability agents are under-incentivized and exert too little effort. For high degrees of competition, high-ability agents are over-incentivized and bear too much risk. For a range of intermediate degrees of competition, however, agents' private information has no impact and both contracts are second-best. Interim efficiency of the least-cost separating allocation in the inferior firm is a sufficient condition for equilibrium existence. If this is violated, there can only be equilibria where the inferior firm ''overbids'', i.e. where it would not break even when attracting both agent types. Adding horizontal differentiation allows for pure-strategy equilibria even when there would be no equilibrium without overbidding in the pure vertical model, but equilibria with overbidding fail to exist.




Citation Styles

Harvard Citation styleBannier, C., Feess, E., Packham, N. and Walzl, M. (2016) Incentive schemes, private information and the double-edged role of competition for agents. (Working Papers in Economics and Statistics, 2016, 20). Innsbruck: University of Innsbruck. https://hdl.handle.net/10419/146137

APA Citation styleBannier, C., Feess, E., Packham, N., & Walzl, M. (2016). Incentive schemes, private information and the double-edged role of competition for agents. (Working Papers in Economics and Statistics, 2016, 20). University of Innsbruck. https://hdl.handle.net/10419/146137


Last updated on 2025-21-05 at 17:13