Article

Bonus Culture: Competitive Pay, Screening and Multitasking

Roland Bénabou et Jean Tirole

Résumé

To analyze the impact of labor market competition on the structure of compensation, we embed multitasking and screening within a Hotelling framework. Competition for talent leads to an escalation of performance pay, shifting effort away from long-term investments, risk management, and cooperation. Efficiency losses can exceed those from a single principal, who dulls incentives to extract rents. As competition intensifies, monopsonistic underincentivization of low-skill agents first decreases and then gives way to growing overincentivization of high-skill ones. Aggregate welfare is thus hill-shaped, while inequality tends to rise monotonically. Bonus caps can help restore balance in incentives but may generate other distortions.

Mots-clés

incentives; performance pay; bonuses; executive compensation; inequality; multitask;

Remplace

Roland Bénabou et Jean Tirole, « Bonus Culture: Competitive Pay, Screening and Multitasking », TSE Working Paper, n° 12-367, avril 2012, révision mars 2013.

Référence

Roland Bénabou et Jean Tirole, « Bonus Culture: Competitive Pay, Screening and Multitasking », Journal of Political Economy, vol. 124, n° 2, avril 2016, p. 305–370.

Voir aussi

Publié dans

Journal of Political Economy, vol. 124, n° 2, avril 2016, p. 305–370