Working Paper

Paid to Quit

Robert Dur, Heiner Schmittdiel
CESifo, Munich, 2015

CESifo Working Paper No. 5648

Inspired by a recent observation about an online retail company, this paper explains why a firm may find it optimal to offer an exit bonus to recent hires so as to induce self-selection. We study a double adverse selection problem, in which the principal can neither observe agents’ commitment to the job nor their intrinsic motivation. A steep wage-tenure profile deters uncommitted agents from applying. An exit bonus can stimulate that –among the committed agents– those who discovered that they are not intrinsically motivated for the job discontinue employment with the principal. Our key findings are that offering an exit bonus increases profits when the first adverse selection problem is sufficiently severe compared to the second and that the exit bonus needs to come as a surprise for the agents in order to function well.

CESifo Category
Labour Markets
Behavioural Economics
Keywords: intrinsic motivation, commitment, self-selection, wage compensation, exit bonus, transparency
JEL Classification: J310, J330, M520, M550