Abstract
This symposium proposal is for a conversation between scholars from different disciplines on the effect of providing strong financial incentives for knowledge and creative workers (in research-intensive industries, health, education, and the arts). Different approaches and empirical studies have made very different conclusions as of whether standard, high-powered economic incentives enhance the performance of these activities or, conversely, inhibit them leading to crowding-out effects). Current theories and empirical evidence will be discussed, with the aim of advancing a common framework and set of methodologies to further our understanding of the motivations for complex activities.
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