Discussion paper

DP15714 When Transparency Fails: Financial Incentives for Local Banking Agents in Indonesia

We study the effect of raising the level and the transparency of financial incentives offered to local agents for acquiring clients of a new banking product on take-up. We find that paying agents higher incentives increases take-up, but only when the incentives are unknown to
prospective clients. When disclosed, higher incentives instead have no effect on take-up, despite greater agent effort. This is explained by the financial incentives conveying a negative signal about the reliability and trustworthiness of the product and its providers to potential
clients. In contexts with limited information about a new technology, financial incentives can thus affect technology adoption through both a supply-side effect (more agent effort) as well as a demand-side signaling effect (change in demand perceptions). Organizations designing
incentive schemes should therefore pay close attention to both the level and the transparency of such incentives.

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Citation

Deserranno, E and G Leon-Ciliotta (2021), ‘DP15714 When Transparency Fails: Financial Incentives for Local Banking Agents in Indonesia‘, CEPR Discussion Paper No. 15714. CEPR Press, Paris & London. https://cepr.org/publications/dp15714