Essays on Repated Moral Hazard

dc.contributor.advisor Cheng Wang
dc.contributor.author Yang, Youzhi
dc.contributor.department Economics
dc.date 2018-08-11T09:14:57.000
dc.date.accessioned 2020-06-30T02:30:34Z
dc.date.available 2020-06-30T02:30:34Z
dc.date.copyright Thu Jan 01 00:00:00 UTC 2009
dc.date.embargo 2013-06-05
dc.date.issued 2009-01-01
dc.description.abstract <p>In Chapter 1, I study an infinitely repeated moral hazard problem in which the principal privately observes and publicly reports the agent's output, as in Fuchs (2007). The role of the agent's private strategies, which depend on the history of his private efforts, is examined in providing incentives for the principal to be truthful. I show that in order for his effort history to work as an incentive device, the agent has to use a mixed strategy, since otherwise his efforts are predictable by the principal and thus, in effect, public information. However, hiding the agent's efforts from the principal incurs a non-negligible efficiency loss, which may, or may not be justified by the efficiency gain from the use of the agent's private strategies. Moreover, the agent's optimal strategy is shown to be consistent with empirical studies on how employees respond to subjective performance evaluations.</p> <p>In Chapter 2, we studies an equilibrium model of the labor market with moral hazard in which jobs are dynamic contracts, job separations are terminations of optimal dynamic contracts, and terminations are used as an incentive device. Transitions from unemployment to new jobs are modeled as a process of matching and bargaining. Non-employed workers make consumption and saving decisions as in a typical growth model, but they must also decide whether or not to participate in the labor market. The equilibrium of the model is characterized. We then calibrate the model to the U.S. labor market to study quantitatively worker turnover, compensation dynamics and distribution. We show that the model can generate equilibrium wage dispersions similar to that in the data. Hornstein, Krusell and Violante (2006) argue that standard search matching models can generate only a very small differential between the average wage and the lowest wage paid in the labor market.</p>
dc.format.mimetype application/pdf
dc.identifier archive/lib.dr.iastate.edu/etd/10728/
dc.identifier.articleid 1746
dc.identifier.contextkey 2806944
dc.identifier.doi https://doi.org/10.31274/etd-180810-2285
dc.identifier.s3bucket isulib-bepress-aws-west
dc.identifier.submissionpath etd/10728
dc.identifier.uri https://dr.lib.iastate.edu/handle/20.500.12876/24934
dc.language.iso en
dc.source.bitstream archive/lib.dr.iastate.edu/etd/10728/Yang_iastate_0097E_10571.pdf|||Fri Jan 14 18:27:06 UTC 2022
dc.subject.disciplines Economics
dc.subject.keywords Repeated Moral Hazard
dc.title Essays on Repated Moral Hazard
dc.type article
dc.type.genre dissertation
dspace.entity.type Publication
relation.isOrgUnitOfPublication 4c5aa914-a84a-4951-ab5f-3f60f4b65b3d
thesis.degree.level dissertation
thesis.degree.name Doctor of Philosophy
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