Dynamic Incentive Effects of Assignment Mechanisms: Experimental Evidence

T. Gall, Xiaochen Hu, Michael Vlassopoulos
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引用次数: 5

Abstract

Optimal assignment and matching mechanisms have been the focus of exhaustive analysis. We focus on their dynamic effects, which have received less attention, especially in the empirical literature: anticipating that assignment is based on prior performance may affect prior performance. We test this hypothesis in a lab experiment. Participants first perform a task individually without monetary incentives; in a second stage, they are paired with another participant according to a pre-announced assignment policy. The assignment is based on first-stage performance and compensation is determined by average performance. Our results are largely consistent with theory: pairing the worst performing individuals with the best yields 20% lower first stage effort than random matching and does not induce truthful revelation of types, which undoes any policy that aims to reallocate types based on performance. Perhaps surprisingly, however, pairing the best with the best yields only 5% higher first stage effort than random matching and the difference is not statistically significant.
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分配机制的动态激励效应:实验证据
最优分配和匹配机制一直是详尽分析的重点。我们关注的是他们的动态效应,这在实证文献中受到的关注较少:预期分配是基于先前的绩效可能会影响先前的绩效。我们在实验室实验中验证了这一假设。参与者首先在没有金钱激励的情况下单独完成一项任务;在第二阶段,根据预先宣布的分配政策,他们与另一名参与者配对。分配基于第一阶段的绩效,薪酬由平均绩效决定。我们的研究结果与理论基本一致:与随机配对相比,将表现最差的个体与表现最好的个体配对,第一阶段的努力会降低20%,而且不会引发对类型的真实揭示,这将使任何旨在根据表现重新分配类型的政策失效。然而,也许令人惊讶的是,将最优秀的人与最优秀的人配对,第一阶段的努力只比随机配对高5%,而且这种差异在统计上并不显著。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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