The Hidden Costs of Control
University of Bonn · IZA - Institute of Labor Economics · +1 more institution
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Abstract
We analyze the consequences of control on motivation in an experimental principal-agent game, where the principal can control the agent by implementing a minimum performance requirement before the agent chooses a productive activity. Our results show that control entails hidden costs since most agents reduce their performance as a response to the principal's controlling decision. Overall, the effect of control on the principal's payoff is nonmonotonic. When asked for their emotional perception of control, most agents who react negatively say that they perceive the controlling decision as a signal of distrust and a limitation of their choice autonomy.
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1,063
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Authors
2Topics & keywords
Topics
Keywords
- Distrust
- Principal (computer security)
- Control (management)
- Stochastic game
- Economics
- Microeconomics
- Principal–agent problem
- Autonomy
UN Sustainable Development Goals
- Peace, Justice and strong institutions
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