| Working
Paper 05-11
by Dan Ariely, Uri Gneezy, George Loewenstein, and
Nina Mazar
Most upper-management and sales force personnel, as
well as workers in many other jobs, are paid based
on performance, which is widely perceived as motivating
effort and enhancing productivity relative to non-contingent
pay schemes. However, psychological research suggests
that excessive rewards can in some cases produce supra-optimal
motivation, resulting in a decline in performance.
To test whether very high monetary rewards can decrease
performance, we conducted a set of experiments at MIT,
the University of Chicago, and rural India. Subjects
in our experiment worked on different tasks and received
performance-contingent payments that varied in amount
from small to large relative to their typical levels
of pay. With some important exceptions, we observed
that high reward levels can have detrimental effects
on performance.
JEL classification codes: D00 microeconomics, general
Keywords: performance-based incentives
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