Never Enough: Dynamic Status Incentives in Organizations
We study the ability of a firm to elicit repeated effort from workers by creating a “rat race” of hierarchical status-based incentives. We examine performance using data on over 5,000 German air force pilots during World War II. Pilots’ effort is hard to monitor; motivation is key to success. Fighter pilot performance increases markedly as they approach eligibility for a medal before falling off upon receipt of the award. The same effort path repeats itself as the pilot nears the next higher-prestige medal. Status-conscious pilots also exert more effort when new medals are introduced. We show that medals serve as substitutes for other forms of status. Medal cachet declines over time as lower-ability pilots receive them, making the introduction of new medals desirable. These results suggest that a tiered, expanding system of status-based incentives can repeatedly leverage worker status concerns to extract effort.
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Copy CitationLeonardo Bursztyn, Ewan Rawcliffe, and Hans-Joachim Voth, "Never Enough: Dynamic Status Incentives in Organizations," NBER Working Paper 34707 (2026), https://doi.org/10.3386/w34707.Download Citation