Score contribution per author:
α: calibrated so average coauthorship-adjusted count equals average raw count
We show that establishing an internal labor market by offering combined contracts across hierarchy levels strictly dominates external recruitment when workers are homogeneous. The reason is that only an internal labor market can exploit higher tier rents for incentive provision on lower tiers. Given unobservable heterogeneity of workers, relying on an internal labor market has the further advantage of improving the selection of high ability workers for higher ranks, which is complemented by rent-based incentive schemes. However, observable worker heterogeneity gives rise to a trade-off between incentive and selection issues and may lead to ports of entry on higher tiers of the hierarchy.