Tournaments, Individualized Contracts and Career Concerns

Koch, A K and Peyrache, E

(2006)

Koch, A K and Peyrache, E (2006) Tournaments, Individualized Contracts and Career Concerns.

Our Full Text Deposits

Full text access: Open

Full Text - 262.77 KB

Links to Copies of this Item Held Elsewhere


Abstract

Young professionals typically do not enter into life-long employment relations with a single firm. Therefore, future employers can learn about individuals' abilities from the observable facts regarding earlier work relations. We show that these informational spill-overs have profound implications for organizational design and the resulting incentive contracts. Through the organizational choice and the contracts that it offers individuals, a firm can strategically manipulate the flow of information to future employers and sharpen incentives. Using a simple moral hazard model, we demonstrate that relative performance contracts, such as rank-order tournaments, can be optimal even though the extant explanations for the optimality of such compensation schemes are absent.

Information about this Version

This is a Submitted version
This version's date is: 5/5/2006
This item is not peer reviewed

Link to this Version

https://repository.royalholloway.ac.uk/items/e090dbb0-322d-4c99-9388-1194efe588f8/4/

Item TypeMonograph (Working Paper)
TitleTournaments, Individualized Contracts and Career Concerns
AuthorsKoch, A K
Peyrache, E
Uncontrolled KeywordsTournaments, Reputation, Asymmetric Learning, Relative Performance Contracts
DepartmentsFaculty of History and Social Science\Economics

Identifiers

Deposited by Research Information System (atira) on 26-Jan-2013 in Royal Holloway Research Online.Last modified on 26-Jan-2013


Details