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Encyclopedia > Perverse incentive

A perverse incentive is a term for an incentive that has the opposite effect of that intended. Perverse incentives by definition produce negative unintended consequences. For the record label, see Incentive Records. ... This article or section does not cite its references or sources. ...

Contents

Examples

  • Some social welfare programs only give money to people with no job. Some argue that this discourages people from working because they would lose welfare benefits if they became employed. According to these critics, this leads to a net increase in poverty. This effect is called the 'Welfare trap.' In some cases, this incentive is countered by gradually phasing out benefits (for example, reducing benefits by 50 cents for each dollar earned), thus preserving the incentive to seek even part-time work.
  • Paying the executives of corporations proportionately to the size of their corporation is intended to encourage them to grow their companies by growing the bottom line (and not their earnings per share). However, it may cause them to pursue mergers to grow their companies, to the detriment of their shareholders' interest.
  • Any system of performance-related pay for corporate executives can induce unacceptable risk-taking, unless there are penalties for poor performance.
  • Funding fire departments by the number of fire calls made is intended to reward the fire departments that do the most work. However, it may discourage them from fire-prevention activities, which reduce the number of fires.[1]
  • In India, a program paying people a bounty for each rat pelt handed in was intended to exterminate rats. Instead it led to the farming of rats.[citation needed]
  • In computer security, users are encouraged to use passwords that are difficult for an attacker to guess. However, assigned passwords that are too complicated may be hard to remember, leading users to write them down rather than memorizing them — and many attackers can find the written passwords more easily than guessing the user-selected weak ones. (Today, some security researchers suggest that it's actually better to use complicated passwords but write them down, as long as they're written down only in a safe place (such as the user's wallet), rather than on the desk. Written passwords can also not be compromised without line-of-sight: i.e., an attacker from a remote location cannot find the written password unless it is visible e.g. through a window.)
  • Setting the same minimum punishment for crimes of different severity may increase the incidence of the most serious crimes. For example, the practise of executing thieves may lead to an increase in murders, since the thief has an incentive to kill any witnesses to avoid being convicted - he will not be any the worse off if caught. This is the root of the saying "Might as well be hung for a sheep as for a lamb". See also Coker v. Georgia.
  • An airline may promote a marketing campaign with one of their local newspaper partners, giving new subscribers 500 frequent-flyer miles on the airline. The goal is to broaden newspaper circulation (and raise the attractiveness of the newspaper to advertisers). A few enterprising people work out that it could actually be cheaper to subscribe to multiple newspapers-- hundreds of subscriptions to the same address-- than buying a ticket to a far-off destination. This massive subscription effort simply costs the newspaper (the entity who pays the airline for mileage awards), yet new readership has not increased at all.
  • Banning the sale of various recreational drugs may make drug dealers more likely to sell to minors. When it is illegal to sell to minors but legal to sell to adults, drug dealers have an incentive to refuse to sell to children. When all sales are equally punished, selling to minors may be safer for the dealer.
  • Some insurance contracts or social entitlement regulations can create an opportunity to change behavior in an unforeseen way so as to take advantage of them in a perverse way (moral hazard, free rider).
  • Where libraries and similar institutions charge a fee for copying but not for printing, users may print multiple copies of a document — which could cost the institution more than free copying would.
  • The United States and The Netherlands have a tax deduction for mortgage interest on one's primary residence. While this was intended to promote home ownership among the middle and lower classes, some wealthy people with a secure income obtain mortgages with a lower down payment, a longer term, or both than they would otherwise choose and invest the amount saved at the time of purchase. The government effectively subsidizes the investments.
  • To prevent police brutality, police in some areas are no longer issued nightsticks. However, this may encourage them to use their heavy metal flashlights instead, causing worse injuries. Police-equipment catalogues often advertise Mag-Lite and similar flashlights with thick aluminum-alloy shells as potential weapons[citation needed].
  • During the Vietnam War, the Central Intelligence Agency and South Vietnamese intelligence conducted a covert operation called the Phoenix Program, which was assigned to detain or kill Viet Cong sympathizers. South Vietnamese and American combatants were offered a reward for each enemy, dead or alive. This allegedly resulted in the killing of more innocent civilians than hostile fighters.
  • Digital Rights Management schemes are often used to discourage illegal piracy by preventing copying of content. Pirated content usually does not contain DRM, so people who do not want DRM in their content have a perverse incentive to pirate it. For example, if the publisher attempts to increase revenues by preventing ripping with DRM, it may be easier to pirate the ripped content than buy a disc with DRM, therefore effectively reducing the publisher's revenues.
  • Asset forfeiture laws are intended to reduce use of illegal drugs by preventing drug-dealers from benefiting from their crimes and thereby making drug-dealing less attractive. If the forfeited property (or proceeds from selling it) is used for law-enforcement then police may have a reason to postpone action against a known drug-dealer until there is more property to seize, with the result that more people buy the drugs.
  • No Child Left Behind Act-type laws require schools to show smooth improvement in their students' test scores. Thus, schools may benefit from having poorer performance one year in order to show 'improvement' the next.
  • Some jurisdictions, such as Ontario, have rent control regimes in place that control the rate of rent increases after a tenancy has commenced, but allow a landlord to negotiate whatever rent (s)he is able to collect from new tenants. Landlords in these jurisdictions have often been accused of trying to evict low-revenue tenants on frivolous grounds, although just cause eviction controls are often put into place to try and stop this practice. Landlords under just cause eviction control regimes have sometimes been accused of responding by deliberately or recklessly letting conditions deteriorate to the point that undesirable low-revenue tenants voluntarily move out. Gathering evidence to enforce laws against such actions is usually much more time consuming than preventing unlawful evictions.[citation needed]
  • 19th century palaeontologists travelling to China used to pay peasants for each fragment of dinosaur bone that they produced. They later discovered that peasants would dig up the bones and then smash into multiple pieces to maximise their payments.[2]

... The welfare trap is a name for a situation in which taxation and welfare systems create strong incentives for people to stay on social welfare payments. ... Corporate redirects here. ... The phrase mergers and acquisitions or M&A refers to the aspect of corporate finance strategy and management dealing with the merging and acquiring of different companies as well as assets. ... A shareholder or stockholder is an individual or company (including a corporation) that legally owns one or more shares of stock in a joint stock company. ... Firefighter with an axe A firefighter, sometimes still called a fireman though women have increasingly joined firefighting units, is a person who is trained and equipped to put out fires, rescue people and in some areas provide emergency medical services. ... A repair locker hose team aboard USS John F. Kennedy (CV 67) combats a controlled fire on the mobile aircraft firefighting training device May 2, 2006. ... Farming, ploughing rice paddy, in Indonesia Agriculture is the process of producing food, feed, fiber and other desired products by cultivation of certain plants and the raising of domesticated animals (livestock). ... Computer security is the current computer science collaboration of the week! Please help improve it to featured article standard. ... A password is a form of secret authentication data that is used to control access to a resource. ... This page meets Wikipedias criteria for speedy deletion. ... A ban is, generally, any decree that prohibits something. ... Recreational drug use is the use of psychoactive drugs for recreational rather than medical or spiritual purposes, although the distinction is not always clear. ... These lollipops, above, were found to contain heroin when inspected by the US Drug Enforcement Administration In jurisdictions where legislation restricts or prohibits the sale of certain popular drugs, it is common for an illegal drugs trade to develop. ... Lady Justice is a personification of the law. ... Insurance, in law and economics, is a form of risk management primarily used to hedge against the risk of a contingent loss. ... This section is studied by Argagui monopoli In law and economics, moral hazard is the name given to the risk that one party to a contract can change their behaviour to the detriment of the other party once the contract has been concluded. ... In economics and political science, free riders are actors who consume more than their fair share of a resource, or shoulder less than a fair share of the costs of its production. ... Percentages are relative to US recommendations for adults. ... This article is about cereals in general. ... Traditional Eastern European Farmer Woman. ... Motto: Je Maintiendrai (Dutch: Ik zal handhaven, English: I Shall Uphold) Anthem: Wilhelmus van Nassouwe Capital Amsterdam1 Largest city Amsterdam Official language(s) Dutch2 Government Parliamentary democracy Constitutional monarchy  - Queen Beatrix  - Prime minister Jan Peter Balkenende Independence Eighty Years War   - Declared July 26, 1581   - Recognised January 30, 1648 (by Spain... A persons primary residence is the dwelling where they usually live, typically a house or an apartment. ... David Kirkwood on the ground after being struck by police batons Police brutality is a term used to describe the excessive use of physical force, assault, verbal attacks, and threats by police officers and other law enforcement officers. ... Hercules fights the Lernaean Hydra with a club A club or cudgel is perhaps the simplest of all melee weapons. ... Maglite flashlight The popular 2xAA Mini Maglite in four variations Maglite (also known as MAGLITE, MAG-LITE) is a brand of flashlight created by Mag Instrument, Inc. ... Combatants Republic of Vietnam United States Republic of Korea Thailand Australia New Zealand The Philippines National Front for the Liberation of South Vietnam Democratic Republic of Vietnam People’s Republic of China Democratic Peoples Republic of Korea Strength US 1,000,000 South Korea 300,000 Australia 48,000... The Central Intelligence Agency (CIA, colloquially known as The Company or simply, The Agency) is an intelligence agency of the United States Government. ... The Phoenix Program (Vietnamese: Kế Hoạch Phụng Hoàng, a word related to fenghuang, the Chinese phoenix) or Operation Phoenix was a covert intelligence operation and assassination program undertaken by the United States Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) in close collaboration with South Vietnamese intelligence during the Vietnam War. ... A Viet Cong soldier, heavily guarded, awaits interrogation following capture in the attacks on Saigon during the festive Tet holiday period of 1968. ... Digital Rights Management (generally abbreviated to DRM) is an umbrella term that refers to any of several technologies used by publishers or copyright owners to control access to and usage of digital data or hardware, and to restrictions associated with a specific instance of a digital work or device. ... Ripping is the process of copying the audio or video data from one media form, such as Digital Versatile Disc (DVD) or Compact Disc (CD), to a hard disk. ... Asset forfeiture is often used to describe the confiscation of assets, by the State, that were used to facilitate crime against people, property, or the State itself. ... These lollipops, above, were found to contain heroin when inspected by the US Drug Enforcement Administration In jurisdictions where legislation restricts or prohibits the sale of certain popular drugs, it is common for an illegal drugs trade to develop. ... Signing ceremony at Hamilton High School in Hamilton, Ohio. ... Motto: Ut Incepit Fidelis Sic Permanet (Latin: Loyal she began, loyal she remains) Official languages English (de facto) Capital Toronto Largest city Toronto Lieutenant-Governor James K. Bartleman Premier Dalton McGuinty (Liberal) Parliamentary representation  - House seats  - Senate seats 106 24 Area Total  - Land  - Water  (% of total)  Ranked 4th 1,076... Rent control refers to laws or ordinances that set price controls on residential housing. ... Rent can refer to: Renting, a system of payment for the temporary use of something owned by someone else. ... A tenant farmer is one who resides on and farms land owned by a landlord. ... A landlord, is the owner of a house, apartment, condominium, or real estate which is rented or leased to an individual or business, who is called the tenant. ... A tenant (from the Latin tenere, to hold), in legal contexts, holds real property by some form of title from a landlord. ... To meet Wikipedias quality standards, this article or section may require cleanup. ... This article is being considered for deletion in accordance with Wikipedias deletion policy. ... Just cause eviction controls or Just Cause are laws that protect renters by ensuring that landlords can only evict with proper cause, such as a tenants failure to pay rent or destruction of property. ... A paleontologist carefully chips rock from a column of dinosaur vertebrae. ... Orders & Suborders Saurischia Sauropodomorpha Theropoda Ornithischia Thyreophora Ornithopoda Marginocephalia Dinosaurs were vertebrate animals that dominated the terrestrial ecosystem for over 160 million years, first appearing approximately 230 million years ago. ...

See also

This article or section does not cite its references or sources. ... A kludge (or kluge) is a clumsy or inelegant solution to a problem. ... This section is studied by Argagui monopoli In law and economics, moral hazard is the name given to the risk that one party to a contract can change their behaviour to the detriment of the other party once the contract has been concluded. ... Wikiquote has a collection of quotations related to: Murphys law It has been suggested that Murphys laws of combat be merged into this article or section. ... The perverse effects of vaccination require two conditions: Too few susceptibles are vaccinated against an infectious disease. ... Purple flowers of the highly invasive Pattersons Curse infest the Warrumbungle National Park in New South Wales, Australia. ... This article or section does not cite its references or sources. ... It has been suggested that Tyranny of the Commons be merged into this article or section. ...

Notes and references

  1. ^ Department for Communities and Local Government (2002). "Fire". In Consultation on the Local Government Finance Formula Grant Distribution. Retrieved November 10, 2006.
  2. ^ Bill Bryson, A Short History of Nearly Everything

William Bill McGuire Bryson, OBE, (born December 8, 1951) is a best-selling American-born author of humorous books on travel, as well as books on the English language and on scientific subjects. ... A Short History of Nearly Everything by Bill Bryson A Short History of Nearly Everything (ISBN 0767908171) is a general science book by Bill Bryson, which explains some areas of science in ordinary language. ...

Other references

  • John Sloan III, Tomislav V. Kovandzic and Lynee M. Vieraitis. Unintended Consequences of Politically Popular Sentencing Policy: The Homicide-Promoting Effects of 'Three Strikes' in U.S. Cities (1980-1999). Criminology & Public Policy, Vol 1, Issue 3, July 2002.
  • UPI story: Study: 3-strikes laws increase homicides

  Results from FactBites:
 
Perverse Incentives and their Removal or Mitigation (508 words)
Perverse incentives emanate from policies or practices that induce unsustainable behavior that destroys biodiversity, often as unanticipated side effects of policies designed to attain other objectives.
Work on perverse incentive measures, and on ways and means to remove or mitigate their negative impacts on biological diversity, is also included in the programme of work on incentive measures, adopted by the Conference of the Parties at its fifth meeting in 2000.
Further to this request, and based on background documentation prepared by the Secretariat, proposals were developed by the second workshop on incentive measures for the conservation and sustainable use of biological diversity, held in Montreal on 3-5 June 2003 with support of the government of The Netherlands.
Incentive - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (1007 words)
Since human beings are purposeful creatures, the study of incentive structures is central to the study of all economic activity (both in terms of individual decision-making and in terms of co-operation and competition within a larger institutional structure).
Personal incentives are essential to understanding why a specific person acts the way she does, but social analysis has to take into account the situation faced by any individual in a given position within a given society—which means mainly examining the practices, rules, and norms established at a social, rather than a personal, level.
The perverse incentives created by the availability of option (2) have been blamed for many of the falsified earnings reports and public statements in the late 1990s and early 2000s.
  More results at FactBites »

 

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