| Working
Paper 05-17
by Mary A. Burke and Kislaya Prasad
We develop a model of contracting in which individual
effort choices are subject to social pressure to conform
to the average effort level of others in the same risk-sharing
group. As in related models of social interactions,
a change in exogenous variables or contract terms generates
a social multiplier. In this environment, small differences
in fundamentals such as skill or effort cost can lead
to large differences in group productivity. We characterize
the optimal contract for this environment and describe
the properties of equilibria, properties that agree
with stylized facts on effort compression in revenue-sharing
settings. The model also implies potential sorting
into groups on the basis of idiosyncratic effort costs.
We estimate a significant social multiplier on physician
productivity, using data on medical partnerships.
Keywords: agency theory, peer pressure, social interactions,
contracts, social multipliers
JEL classification codes: D2, D8, C7
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