Dynamic Incentive Effects of Relative Performance Pay: A Field Experiment


Research Paper
This publication is part of collection
Published by
Related Files
asset icon
(2010-1241.pdf, 0.2MB)

We conduct a field experiment among 189 stores of a retail chain to study dynamic incentive effects of relative performance pay. Employees in the randomly selected treatment stores could win a bonus by outperforming three comparable stores from the control group over the course of four weeks. Treatment stores received weekly feedback on relative performance. Control stores were kept unaware of their involvement, so that their performance generates exogenous variation in the relative performance of the treatment stores. As predicted by theory, treatment stores that lag far behind do not respond to the incentives, while the responsiveness of treatment stores close to winning a bonus increases in relative performance. On average, the introduction of the relative performance pay scheme does not lead to higher performance.



Keywords


Classifications using Journal of Economic Literature (JEL) Classification System
Automatically Extracted Terms
  • store
  • performance
  • treatment
  • effect
  • treatment stores
  • incentive
  • experiment
  • bonus
  • treatment store
  • control
  • incentive effects
  • difference
  • scheme
  • comparison
  • figure
  • comparison store
  • point
  • treatment effect
  • control stores
  • control condition