Robust contracting under double moral hazard

  • Carroll G
  • Bolte L
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Abstract

We study contracting when both principal and agent have to exert noncontractible effort for production to take place. An analyst is uncertain about what actions are available and evaluates a contract by the expected payoffs it guarantees to each party in spite of the surrounding uncertainty. Both parties are risk‐neutral; there is no limited liability. Linear contracts, which leave the agent with a constant share of output in exchange for a fixed fee, are optimal. This result holds both in a preliminary version of the model, where the principal only chooses to supply or not supply an input, and in several variants of a more general version, where the principal may have multiple choices of input. The model thus generates nontrivial linear sharing rules without relying on either limited liability or risk aversion.

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APA

Carroll, G., & Bolte, L. (2023). Robust contracting under double moral hazard. Theoretical Economics, 18(4), 1623–1663. https://doi.org/10.3982/te4916

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