Public Administration and Management

Cream-skimming, parking and other intended and unintended effects of high-powered, performance-based contracts

Article, Refereed Journal

As performance-based contracting in social welfare services continues to expand, concerns about potential unintended effects are also growing. We analyze the incentive effects of high-powered, performance-based contracts and their implications for program outcomes using panel data on Dutch cohorts of unemployed and disabled workers that were assigned to private social welfare providers in 2002 to 2005. We employ a difference-in-differences design that takes advantage of the fact that contracts gradually moved from partial performance-contingent pay to full (100 percent) performance-contingent contracting schemes. We develop explicit measures of selection into the programs and find evidence of cream skimming and other gaming activities on the part of providers, but little impact of these activities on program outcomes. Moving to a system with contract payments fully contingent on performance appears to increase job placements, but not job duration, for more readily employable workers.

Research Topic
Public Administration and Management

Metropolitan governance in the United States: Is fragmentation an effective strategy?

Book Chapter
Metropolitan Governance in the Federalist Americas: Strategies for Equitable and Integrated Development. Eds. Peter K. Spink, Peter M. Ward and Robert H. Wilson. University of Notre Dame Press, 2012. 65-99.
Research Topic
Public Administration and Management
Subscribe to Public Administration and Management