Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Moral Hazard and performance incentives M/R chapter 6 The primary aim: Discuss how the board and the personnel department design incentive efficient payments.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Moral Hazard and performance incentives M/R chapter 6 The primary aim: Discuss how the board and the personnel department design incentive efficient payments."— Presentation transcript:

1 Moral Hazard and performance incentives M/R chapter 6 The primary aim: Discuss how the board and the personnel department design incentive efficient payments

2 Designing efficient incentive contracts The two objectives of incentive contracts: provide incentive and insulate from risk Efficient incentive contracts: balance the costs of risk bearing against the benefits of improved incentives A public company owned by many shareholders is an efficient mode of risk-sharing: employers are better prepared to bear risks of incentive payments than employees A close relationship between pay and performance.

3 Efficient balance of incentive and risk factors (employees): Avoids to motivate workers to increase productivity by paying bonus based on profitability The personnel department links reward to contributions made directly by the employees such as the volume of output, the number of defects, the number of days absent.

4 Managerial compensation: Arguable that incentive efficiency requires that managers bear some of the risks associated with returns and get rights to residual control (residual claimants) Performance related pay should decline with the total risk in an industry. A risk averse CEO, who is forced to accept a high-powered contract, demands a higher average pay level to compensate for increased variance in compensation (Gurgler p 44).

5 ……Managerial compensation: Excluding stock option grants: a ten percent increase in firm profitability leads to a 1 to 1.5 percent increase in CEO compensation (large US companies) Stocks and stock options are the driving force behind the close pay- performance relationship in the USA Relative performance does not matter much for managerial compensation The presence of a family representative (in the management or the board) reduces the probability of adopting an equity-authorizing plan or a stock option plan

6 Career concern models: How are employees deterred from shirking? How are trainees prevented from leaving a job? Models for seniority provision Employees will not retire voluntarily at the appropriate day Mechanism that makes promises by the firms credible

7 Influence costs: Undesired employee activities that are intended to change a superior’s action to the sole benefit of the employee Costs of discretionary authority, which arise only when an authority exists whose decisions can be influenced.

8 Costs avoided in decentralized contexts: 1)Those with discretionary authority may misuse their authority directly, on their own initiative 2)Others in the organization may attempt to persuade or manipulate those with authority to use their authority excessively

9 Incentive contracts coexist with Labour Markets (LM) and Markets for Corp. Control (MCC): CEO interest to build reputation by signalling good behaviour (MCC) Golden parachutes to CEO a guarantee for investments in firm-specific assets (MCC) Benefits from shirking or misinforming that may be detected are less attractive if the labour market is thin (LM)


Download ppt "Moral Hazard and performance incentives M/R chapter 6 The primary aim: Discuss how the board and the personnel department design incentive efficient payments."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google