Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
957647 Journal of Economic Theory 2009 37 Pages PDF
Abstract

We analyze a tractable class of multitask principal–agent problems, such as the one faced by a firm with a manager overseeing several projects. We allow for tasks to be complements or substitutes. We avoid the problems associated with the first-order approach by directly characterizing the shape of the agent's indirect utility function, which exhibits a convex then concave shape in effort. We identify a new source of allocational inefficiency across tasks: excessive concentration, and its consequence, insufficient risk taking. Optimal incentive schemes in our environment are generally “fragile”: small changes in fundamentals can cause the agent's effort to collapse.

Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities Economics, Econometrics and Finance Economics and Econometrics
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