Abstract
A production process involves a principal and two privately informed agents. Production requires coordinated decision making. It might be carried in a centralized organization or through delegated contracting in a hierarchical structure. We compare the performance of different organizational structures when renegotiation of initial contracts is possible. We show that delegated contracting always dominates centralization if the downstream contract between the agents is observable. Contracting (resp. control) should be delegated to the agent with the least (resp. most) important information. If downstream contracts are not observable, we obtain a tradeoff between centralization and delegation.
Keywords
Organizations; Mechanism design; Decentralization; incentives; Non-commitment;
Reference
Stefan Ambec, and Michel Poitevin, “Decision-making in organizations: when to delegate and whom to delegate”, Review of Economic Design, vol. 20, n. 2, 2016, pp. 115–143.
Published in
Review of Economic Design, vol. 20, n. 2, 2016, pp. 115–143