Cultural norms and financial incentives: A model of how to fund universities
Description
This paper derives the optimal compensation contract when two asymmetrically verifiable tasks are tied together, a cultural norm of behavior coexists with a financial incentive, and public funding is also a concern. To formulate ideas, we restrict the attention to higher education. The model generates at least three results: First, the monetary incentive for research crowds out the social teaching norm, i.e., peer pressure. Second, increased intrinsic motivation in teaching induces a social multiplier effect on the teaching effort. Third, the government underfunds the university if the teaching standard is lower than that of the government to implement its standard.
Notes
Files
2021 Gunnes12_1_1.pdf
Files
(788.8 kB)
Name | Size | Download all |
---|---|---|
md5:78e6435403bb7f0ce1c0871989256ec3
|
788.8 kB | Preview Download |
Additional details
Related works
- References
- Journal article: 2038-1379 (ISSN)