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The effect of monetary incentives on task attractiveness, effort and performance

Michael Robinson (Accounting, University of Tampa, Tampa, Florida, USA)
Maia Farkas (Independent Researcher, Carlsbad, California, USA)

Journal of Applied Accounting Research

ISSN: 0967-5426

Article publication date: 18 May 2021

Issue publication date: 7 October 2021

742

Abstract

Purpose

There is a longstanding debate regarding the effectiveness of financial incentives in improving work performance. This study is motivated by seemingly conflicting theory and mixed research evidence, and advances the management accounting literature on pay-for-performance by examining the separate and joint effects of task attractiveness and monetary incentives on allocation of effort and on performance.

Design/methodology/approach

This study uses an online, multi-period, mixed design experiment with two independent groups of participants who receive either incentive pay or flat pay to perform a multidimensional job. The job tasks differ in complexity and participants can choose how to distribute effort between tasks. Observations are taken across two periods.

Findings

If the complex task is initially viewed as attractive it becomes less attractive over time, while the attractiveness of the simple task is stable. Participants who receive flat pay and who find the complex task attractive spent more time on working on that task than those compensated with incentives. Incentives caused higher initial performance than flat pay among participants who find the complex task to be attractive, but the differential is transient; dissatisfaction with initial performance seemingly contribute to a decline in attractiveness and deterioration in performance.

Research limitations/implications

The results indicate that task attributes and personal preferences moderate the effects of incentives on performance and that further research is needed to examine strategies to mitigate spillover effects of deficient performance to subsequent periods. However, the findings may not be applicable to extremely complex work environments involving numerous tasks and/or group work.

Practical implications

Showing that incentives may have a positive but transitory effect on performance, because task attributes and personal preferences moderate the incentive-performance relationship, may have practical implications for hiring, job design and compensation systems design.

Originality/value

This paper contributes to the literature on pay-for-performance by using a setting that better represents contemporary work environments than prior studies have and introduces choice over effort allocation. Additionally, we contribute to theory by showing that economics and psychology theories should be viewed as complements in investigating the intricate relationship between incentives and performance.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

The authors are grateful to the IMA Research Foundation for providing funding for this paper. The authors also thank workshop participants at the University of South Florida and two anonymous reviewers for valuable feedback.

Citation

Robinson, M. and Farkas, M. (2021), "The effect of monetary incentives on task attractiveness, effort and performance", Journal of Applied Accounting Research, Vol. 22 No. 5, pp. 761-779. https://doi.org/10.1108/JAAR-01-2021-0018

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2021, Emerald Publishing Limited

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