Making a Difference
42 Pages Posted: 17 Aug 2005
Date Written: October 2005
Abstract
Despite the potential for free-riding, workers motivated by 'making a difference' to the mission or output of an establishment may donate labour to it. When the establishment uses performance related compensation (PRC), these labour donations closely resemble a standard private provision of public goods problem, and are not rational in large labour pools. Without PRC, however, the problem differs significantly from a standard private provision of public goods situation. Specifically, in equilibrium: there need not be free-riding, decisions are non-monotonic in valuations, and contribution incentives are significant even in large populations. When PRC is not used, the establishment tends to favour setting low wages which help to select a labor force driven by concern for the firm's output. Expected output can actually fall with the wage in this situation. For sufficiently high levels of risk aversion, performance related pay can yield less expected output than when compensation is output independent.
Keywords: Privately provided public goods, voluntarism, incentive schemes, public sector employment
JEL Classification: H11, H41, H83, J45
Suggested Citation: Suggested Citation
Do you want regular updates from SSRN on Twitter?
Recommended Papers
-
Beauty is a Beast, Frog is a Prince: Assortative Matching with Nontransferabilities
By Patrick Legros and Andrew F. Newman
-
Incentives in Markets, Firms and Governments
By Daron Acemoglu, Michael Kremer, ...
-
Signaling and Screening of Workers' Motivation
By Josse Delfgaauw and Robert Dur
-
Incentives and Workers' Motivation in the Public Sector
By Josse Delfgaauw and Robert Dur
-
Incentives and Workers' Motivation in the Public Sector
By Josse Delfgaauw and Robert Dur