Do Monetary Incentives Undermine Performance on Intrinsically Enjoyable Tasks? A Field Test

Authored by mitpressjournals.org and submitted by smurfyjenkins
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Economists have long been intrigued by an influential literature in psychology positing that monetary pay lowers performance on enjoyable tasks by crowding out agents' intrinsic interest in them. But typical experiments in this literature do not report a full set of performance metrics, which might reveal conflicting evidence on crowding out. Further, they may suffer from confounds. To evaluate these issues, we review over 100 prior tests and run a field experiment building on the canonical two-session test for crowding out wherein agents receive pay for an interesting activity in session one that is withdrawn unexpectedly in session two. We test whether pay harms performance using a comprehensive set of performance measures, and if so, whether unmet pay expectations might also contribute to this decline. Our results on output, productivity and quits are most consistent with a standard economics model than with a crowding out one. Additional, though more speculative, evidence suggests that unmet pay expectations may harm output quality.

STXGregor on August 27th, 2020 at 23:52 UTC »

Sounds like this matches up with the concept of loss aversion from Tversky and Kahneman. There’s an amazing book by Daniel Kahneman titled “Thinking, Fast and Slow”. It’s primarily about how our brains have two different thought processes, one of which is our sort of “auto-pilot” and the other is our conscious brain. But it touches on a lot of other fascinating economic principles that he’s known for studying, one of which is loss aversion. Basically, losing $20 causes more dissatisfaction than gaining $20 causes satisfaction. Highly recommend this book for, honestly, just about everyone. Super insightful.

signops on August 27th, 2020 at 23:41 UTC »

There's a funny joke about this. An old man paying kids to bang trash can lids then stopping payment. Solved his irritation with them in the first place.

deviantbono on August 27th, 2020 at 23:02 UTC »

IIRC one of the FANG companies (goog or fb) offered grants/awards to high performing individuals, but then stopped partially for this reason. People who didn't get the award were demoralized, bit people who did get them resented them being taken away.