Article

Bonus Culture: Competitive Pay, Screening and Multitasking

Roland Bénabou, and Jean Tirole

Abstract

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.

Keywords

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

Replaces

Roland Bénabou, and Jean Tirole, Bonus Culture: Competitive Pay, Screening and Multitasking, TSE Working Paper, n. 12-367, April 2012, revised March 2013.

Reference

Roland Bénabou, and Jean Tirole, Bonus Culture: Competitive Pay, Screening and Multitasking, Journal of Political Economy, vol. 124, n. 2, April 2016, pp. 305–370.

See also

Published in

Journal of Political Economy, vol. 124, n. 2, April 2016, pp. 305–370