Title: Management and Markets
1Management and Markets
- Agency Models and Incentives
- (usual thanks to George Baker)
2Course Content (Strategy and Org Econ.)
- Overview Introduction to Strategy
- Market Competition (sessions 2-6)
- Theory of the Firm (sessions 7-8)
- Internal Organization Incentives and
Performance Management (sessions 9-11) - Summary and Application to Innovation
3Conventional Principal-Agent Problem
- Principal and agent
- Principal owns the firm, gets output V
- Agent works, exerting effort e
- Solve for the (second best) optimal sharing rule
- This problem emphasizes tradeoff between effort
inducement and risk aversion of agent
4- Production function Output V
- V ge e
- Effort e is unobservable to the principal
- g is the marginal product of agent effort
- e represents the random factors that affect
output
5- Preferences -- Principal
- Principal cares only about money, and is risk
neutral (maximizes expected value) - Pays the agent S bV (salary and incentive pay
based on rate b times outcome V) - Keeps V-S-bV
- Chooses S and b to maximize EV-S-bV
6- Preferences -- Agent
- Agent is risk averse, and cares about money and
effort. - Likes money
- Dislikes effort and variance in pay s2
- Has an alternative worth H
- EU ES bV - e2/2 - rs2pay
- r is a parameter capturing degree of risk
aversion
7Timing
- Principal offers agent a contract
- Agent rejects or accepts
- If rejects, agent gets H
- If accepts, proceeds to next step
- Agent exerts effort, generates value
- Principal and agent get their payoffs
8Formal statement of the problem
- Principals problem
- MaxS,b E(V - S - bV)
- subject to
- (1) the contract must give the agent utility H
- Participation constraint
- (2) the agent will choose e to maximize his
utility - Incentive compatibility constraint
9Solution Procedure
- Use IC constraint to solve for e(b)
- Use PC to solve for S(b)
- Maximize the principals expected profit as a
function of b
10Incentive Compatibility constraint
- Agent maximizes utility
- MaxeE(Sb(ge e)) - e2/2 - rs2pay
- e gb
- Higher bonus rate increases effort
- Higher marginal product increases effort
11Participation Constraint
- ESbV - e2/2 - rs2pay H
- S H - EbV e2/2 rs2pay
- H - EbV (gb)2/2 rb2s2e
12Principals problem
- Maxb EV - S - bV
- Maxb g2b - H - E(bV) (gb)2/2 rb2s2e -
E(bV) - Maxb g2b - H - (gb)2/2 - rb2s2e
13Solution
14Risk and Incentives
- Standard agency model predicts negative
relationship between risk and incentives - What is the empirical evidence on this?
- Prendergast 2003, Tenuous trade-off
- Allen and Lueck 1992 on share-cropping
- Crops with more variable yield per acre are more
likely to use share-cropping than fixed rent
contract - Martin 88 and Lafontaine 92 on franchising
- Proportion company-owned decreases with the
variability of outlet sales - Likelihood of franchising increases with the
proportion of discontinued outlets
15Incentive alignment and the agency problem
- Why are incentives weaker in organizations than
in markets? - Risk preferences
- Distortion in performance measurement
16Distortion in performance measurement
- On the folly of paying for A while hoping for
B. (Kerr 1975) - Multi-task agency problems
- Holmstrom Milgrom 1991
- Pay for what can be measured
- Distortion
- Baker 1992, 2002
- Paying for A while hoping for B
17Holmstrom and Milgrom (JLEO 91) Multitask
Principal-Agent Problems
- Agents task has several dimensions (e.g.
Volume and quality) and at least one dimension
easy and one hard to measure - Incentive pay
- Induces effort and allocates risk (conventional
treatment) - Allocates attention among various dimensions (new
here) - When harder to measure other dimensions then less
desirable to provide incentives on measurable
dimensions - Including attention leads to explanation for
lower-powered incentives that are often observed
in practice - Job design is instrument to constrain agents
attention allocation - Lowers marginal opportunity cost by changing
incentives to engage in competing tasks - Useful when performance of agent on central task
is hard to measure
18Baker (1992 and 2002)
- Principals objective is non-contractible
- Private company
- Non-profit
- Government agency
- Public company
- How good a performance measure is the stock price
for most employees?
19Performance Measurement
- In the standard model
- There is no way for a agent to do the wrong
thing - There are no dysfunctional consequences
- The principal knows what she wants the agent to
do - She just cant observe effort
- There is no notion of specific knowledge
20A richer model
- Agents can do the wrong thing
- Sears Auto Centers
- Agents can game the system
- Joseph Jett at Kidder, Peabody
- Well intentioned systems can go wrong
- Education reform and standardized tests
21Baker 2002 Model
- V is the principals objective
- It is known to the principal, but is not
contractible - P is a performance measure
- It is a contractible outcome, but it is not
exactly what the principal wants - Two questions
- How will firms use these performance measures in
incentive contracts? - What are the characteristics (statistical and
otherwise) that make for a good P?
22Analytical frameworkA multi-task model
- Organizational objective
- V fe e
- where
- e is a vector of tasks
- f is a vector of marginal products on these tasks
- e represents uncontrollables
23A distorted performance measure
- P ge ?
- where
- e is the same vector of tasks
- g is a vector of marginal products on these tasks
(which might be different from the fs) - ? represents uncontrollables (which might be
correlated with e)
24Distortion
- Some elements of the vector g are different from
those of the vector f - That is, there are things that the agent can do
that increase the performance measure, but not
the organizations objective (and vice versa) - Cooking the books
- RD spending
- Teaching to the test
25Contracting with distortion
- Pay S bP
- Agent is risk neutral
- What will the optimal contract look like?
- The strength of optimal incentives
- Decreases with an increase in distortion (cos ?
smaller) - Decreases w/ an increase in risk aversion (h) and
noise (s2) - Increases with agents marginal product (f)
26Comparative statics (cont.)
- What about the correlation of P and V?
- The optimal incentive contract is independent of
the correlation between P and V! - What matters is not whether the measure is
correlated with value, but rather whether the
margins are correlated
27Job Training Partnership Act (JTPA)Heckman,
Heinrich, and Smith (1997)Courty and Marschke
(1997)
- True objective
- Increase the employability of the disadvantaged
- Performance measure
- Employment outcomes of those in the program
- Problems
- Cream skimming
- Strategic termination
28Customer satisfaction Ittner, Larcker and Meyer
(1997)
- Profitable bank branches have high levels of
customer satisfaction - True objective
- Well-run bank branches
- Performance measure
- Customer satisfaction
- Result
- Within a year, the branch managers with the
highest bonuses were those in the least
profitable branches
29Degradation
- Performance measures that are good predictors of
performance degrade once they become the basis
for incentive contracts - NCLB (no child left behind) and test scores
- Koretz, Linn, Dunbar, and Shepard, 1991
- Test scores go up on high stakes tests, but not
on otherwise similar low stakes tests
30Controllability and distortion
- Paying for accounting profits or stock prices
- Responsibility accounting
- Rewarding for individual or group performance
- Rewarding for long-term or short-term performance
- Relative performance evaluation (filter out
noise) - What the are tradeoffs?
31CEO
Division Manager
Division Manager
Sales Manager
Plant Manager
Plant Manager
32Autonomous Strategic Process at Intel(Burgelman
91)
- Middle managers try to get organization to wrok
on thing outside current strategy - RISC chips as disguised co-processor
- Add-on boards via corporate venturing
- Need for bottom-up internal experimentation
- What incentive structure would you design to
achieve this? (how implement?) - How can firms balance induced and autonomous
processes? - Relate to Built to Last or GE Welch?
33Questions
- Limitations of incentive contracts that we have
have looked at so far - Range of instruments explored too narrow. Arent
other mechanisms useful (e.g. promotion,
financial contracts, internal governance
mechanisms) and how would their use affect the
results of the models? - Agents motivated by other than payhow does this
affect value of these models? - As agents differ on key motivating factors, can
these contracts be effective in a
one-size-fits-all implementation or is customized
(and expensive) implementation needed? - How can these contracts be used to motivate..? Do
they introduce additional bad side effects? - joint or team production?
- creative job workers?
- Is the tenure system efficient?
34Conclusions positive implications
- Why are incentives in organizations weak?
- Most performance measures are distorted
- Organizations reduce the strength of optimal
incentive plans to account for this distortion - Organizations use strong incentives when
performance measures are controllable and not too
distorted
35Conclusions normative implications
- Organizations provide rewards even when they are
not designed - Promotions
- Perks
- Status and prestige
- Attaboys
36- Conclusions 2
- Organizations often get incentive provision
wrong! - The folly of paying for A while hoping for B
- Models like these can help those in organizations
to understand what makes incentive systems work
better - Dont rely on correlated measures
- Analyze how agents can game the measures
- Anticipate performance measure degradation