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Journal ArticleDOI

Managerial Expertise, Private Information, and Pay-Performance Sensitivity

Sunil Dutta
- 01 Mar 2008 - 
- Vol. 54, Iss: 3, pp 429-442
TLDR
This paper characterizes optimal pay-performance sensitivities of compensation contracts for managers who have private information about their skills, and those skills affect their outside employment opportunities, and identifies plausible circumstances under which risk and incentives are positively associated.
Abstract
This paper characterizes optimal pay-performance sensitivities of compensation contracts for managers who have private information about their skills, and those skills affect their outside employment opportunities. The model presumes that the rate at which a manager's opportunity wage increases in his expertise depends on the nature of that expertise, i.e., whether it is general or firm specific. The analysis demonstrates that when managerial expertise is largely firm specific (general), the optimal pay-performance sensitivity is lower (higher) than its optimal value in a benchmark setting of symmetric information. Furthermore, when managerial skills are largely firm specific (general), the optimal pay-performance sensitivity decreases (increases) as managerial skills become a more important determinant of firm performance. Unlike the standard agency-theoretic prediction of a negative trade-off between risk and pay-performance sensitivity, this paper identifies plausible circumstances under which risk and incentives are positively associated. In addition to providing an explanation for why empirical tests of risk-incentive relationships have produced mixed results, the analysis generates insights that can be useful in guiding future empirical research.

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Citations
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An uncertain wage contract model with adverse selection and moral hazard

TL;DR: This paper considers a wage contract design problem faced by an employer who employs an employee to work for him in labor market and the equivalent form of the proposed wage contract model and the optimal solution to this form.
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Project duration contract design problem under uncertain information

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Regulatory Commitment to Auditing: The Impact of Sarbanes-Oxley on Pay-Performance Sensitivity and Managerial Effort

TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigate the impact on pay-performance sensitivity of a commitment by regulatory bodies to monitor the auditing of managers' financial reporting and find that in a more rigorous audit environment, the reliability of performance measures increases.
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The Participation Constraint and CEO Equity Grants

TL;DR: In this article, the authors examine the extent to which participation constraints influence CEO annual equity grants and find that firms are more likely to meet the peer grant levels when there is higher labor market competition and when the firm discloses that key personnel is a risk factor.
Dissertation

Effects of organisational policies and practices on job satisfaction among employees of international non-governmental organisations (INGOs)

A. Ifabua
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examined forms and levels of job satisfaction among International Non-Governmental Organisations (INGO) employees in the United Kingdom and Africa and explored the influence of INGO mission, culture, structure and HRM policies and practices on employee job satisfaction.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Multitask Principal–Agent Analyses: Incentive Contracts, Asset Ownership, and Job Design

TL;DR: In this article, a principal-agent model that can explain why employment is sometimes superior to independent contracting even when there are no productive advantages to specific physical or human capital and no financial market imperfections to limit the agent's borrowings is presented.
Journal ArticleDOI

Performance Pay and Top Management Incentives

TL;DR: For example, the authors estimates of the pay-performance relation (including pay, options, stockholdings, and dismissal) for chief executive officers indicate that CEO wealth changes $3.25 for every $1,000 change in shareholder wealth.
Book

Performance pay and top-management incentives

TL;DR: For example, the authors estimates of the pay-performance relation (including pay, options, stockholdings, and dismissal) for chief executive officers indicate that CEO wealth changes $3.25 for every $1,000 change in shareholder wealth.
Journal ArticleDOI

A Theory of Incentives in Procurement and Regulation.

TL;DR: A Theory of Incentives in Procurement and Regulation (TIIN) as mentioned in this paper is a popular textbook for regulatory economics, with a particular focus on the regulation of natural monopolies such as military contractors, utility companies and transportation authorities.
Book

A Theory of Incentives in Procurement and Regulation

TL;DR: A Theory of Incentives in Procurement and Regulation (TIIN) as mentioned in this paper is a popular textbook for regulatory economics, with a particular focus on the regulation of natural monopolies such as military contractors, utility companies and transportation authorities.
Trending Questions (1)
What are the specific information of does are pay?

The specific information about pay in the paper is related to the optimal pay-performance sensitivity of compensation contracts for managers with private information about their skills.