Inequality-aversion, contracts and incentives.
Date
2008
Authors
Guan, Bin
Editors
Advisors
Bayer, Ralph-Christopher
McLean, Ian Warwick
McLean, Ian Warwick
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Type:
Thesis
Citation
Statement of Responsibility
Conference Name
Abstract
In standard contract-theoretic models, the underlying assumption is that an agent is
purely selfish, and his objective is to maximize his own payoff. A large amount of
empirical evidence has pointed out that many individuals are also motivated by other
psychological considerations, such as fairness concerns and reciprocity. Theorists
have been engaged in finding more realistic assumptions that are consistent with
the ways in which economic agents behave in real life. Among the existing theories,
the theory of inequity aversion developed by Fehr and Schmidt [35] has attracted
enormous attention. It soon became a useful tool in behavioral contract theory, which
capitalizes on the power of social preferences theories to enhance understanding of
real-world contracting phenomena. The present thesis aims at contributing to the
behavioral contract literature by investigating how inequality aversion preferences
impact on the optimal contract design in a financial contracting environment and the
agent's incentive in a career concerns experiment.
Chapter 2 reviews some of the recent theoretical contributions to the development
of the theories of reciprocity and fairness. Emphasis is placed on sketching the theories, demonstrating their abilities to explain experimental regularities and pointing out some potential problems that are inherent in the existing theories. In addition, we present a survey of the recent theoretical contributions linking inequality aversion and the theory of incentives, where the traditional selfish agent assumption is replaced by the more realistic assumption that the individual agent is also inequality-averse. Incorporating more realism into economic modelling, such as assuming some individuals are inequality-averse, appears to be a promising avenue for research in the theory of incentives, as it generates more refutable predictions that models based on the selfish agent assumption cannot offer.
Chapter 3 analyzes a tractable two-period staged financing model in which a
single principal interacts with an agent who is risk-neutral and inequality-averse,
offering him an equity contract. We fully characterize the menu of the optimal sharing
contracts. Our results show that inequality-aversion changes the structure of the
optimal contract. More importantly, we show that it is more likely we will observe an
equal sharing contract when the agent is inequality-averse. Our findings for efficiency comparison indicate that inequality-aversion exacerbates the distortions caused by moral hazard, which leads to a further downward distortion in terms of total social welfare in this staged financing context. Incorporating inequality-aversion into a dynamic staged financing game thus allows us to interpret real-world contractual arrangements in the venture capital industry where equal split contracts dominate.
In Chapter 4, we revisit the innovative Holmström's-type career concerns experiment
by Irlenbusch and Silwka [47]. In particular, we introduce inequality-aversion, a
theoretical short cut for reciprocity, into the analysis and investigate if it is the missing link that potentially drives the results in the experiment. Two related but conceptually different models are considered. The complete information model confirms that inequality-aversion induces positive effort in the second period, but does not predict any differences in the effort choices across both periods in the revealed-ability setting.
The incomplete information model's predictions conform more closely to the observations in the revealed-ability setting, and its predictions for the hidden-ability setting can partly explain the lower effort choices observed in the hidden-ability setting. Our analysis suggests that inequality-aversion is part of the missing link, but not all. Incorporating fairness intentions into the analysis should open more opportunities for explaining the experimental results in Irlenbusch and Silwka.
School/Discipline
Business School
Dissertation Note
Thesis (Ph.D.) - University of Adelaide, Business School, 2008