Why socially concerned firms use low-powered managerial incentives: A complementary explanation
We study a duopoly market where a profit-maximizing firm and a socially concerned firm compete by offering differentiated products to consumers. Both firms delegate the quantity (price) decisions to a manager. The socially concerned firm employs an intrinsically motivated manager whose interest is partially aligned with the firm's objective. The profit-maximizing firm's manager is simply interested in maximizing compensation. We find that depending on the substitutability of the firms' products and the level of the firm's social concern, the socially concerned firm might prefer – solely for strategic reasons – a flat wage for compensating its motivated manager rather than a variable bonus. Our paper points to strategic motives as a complementary explanation for the observation that hybrid organizations with objectives other than profits frequently rely on different forms of compensation than their for-profit rivals.
Kopel, M. und Putz, E. M. (2021): Why socially concerned firms use low-powered managerial incentives: A complementary explanation, in: Economic Modelling, Vol. 94, pp. 473-482, doi: doi.org/10.1016/j.econmod.2020.11.002.
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