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Incentive pay: Productivity, sorting, and adjacent rents

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  • Stefanec, Noah Patrick

Abstract

I model and empirically test the hypothesis that higher-quality workers prefer performance pay to time-rate based pay because they realize rent upon two different dimensions: Explicit and implicit rents. First, higher-quality workers are outright more productive than their lower-quality counterparts, earning them explicit rent (Curme and Stefanec, 2007). Second, these same factors of production facilitate the unobserved heterogeneity for incentive workers, earning them implicit rent because they can produce a given level of output with less effort. I find strong empirical evidence to confirm that these implicit rents exist and I measure them at 1.5-3.4 percent of average real hourly earnings.

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  • Stefanec, Noah Patrick, 2010. "Incentive pay: Productivity, sorting, and adjacent rents," Journal of Behavioral and Experimental Economics (formerly The Journal of Socio-Economics), Elsevier, vol. 39(2), pages 171-179, April.
  • Handle: RePEc:eee:soceco:v:39:y:2010:i:2:p:171-179
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    2. Weiyi Zhang & Hiromasa Takahashi & Junyi Shen, 2016. "Does Physical Exercise Affect Tradeoffs between Fixed Pay and Performance-related Pay for Individuals?," Discussion Paper Series DP2016-13, Research Institute for Economics & Business Administration, Kobe University.

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