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The Joint Effects of a Manager’s Level of Narcissism and Incentive Scheme on Employee Effort

Sat, October 3, 10:00 to 11:30am, TBA

Abstract

Narcissism has become the most heavily discussed personality trait in recent times. However, accounting research on managerial narcissism and its implications for management control system choices, such as incentive schemes, is scarce. Based on Christ and Vance’s (2018) “cascading controls” framework, we propose that employees’ work effort depends upon their manager’s level of narcissism and compensation scheme. In a fully incentivized online experiment with 329 German employees, we manipulate managers’ level of narcissism (high or low) and the framing of managers’ compensation scheme (bonus or penalty) and examine the joint effect of these two factors on employees’ effort to help the manager reach her or his goals (obtain a bonus or avoid a penalty). In line with psychological research, the results show that subordinates perceive the relationship quality with their manager as lower when manager narcissism is high and that employees show more negative (and less positive) emotions towards a narcissistic manager. Furthermore, employees invest less (more) effort to help the manager when the manager’s narcissism is high (low). Importantly, we also show that relative to a manager’s bonus contract, a penalty contract has a negative effect on employees’ effort when the manager’s narcissism is high. Our results underline the negative consequences of narcissism for leader-follower relations and have important implications for management compensation design in business practice.

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