Performance incentives within firms: the effect of managerial responsibility (2002)
| Citations: | 19 - 0 self |
BibTeX
@MISC{Aggarwal02performanceincentives,
author = {Rajesh K. Aggarwal and Andrew A. Samwick},
title = {Performance incentives within firms: the effect of managerial responsibility },
year = {2002}
}
Years of Citing Articles
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Abstract
We examine the distribution of incentives across executives with explicit divisional responsibilities, those with broad oversight authority over the firm, and CEOs. Oversight executives have pay-performance incentives that are $1.22 per thousand dollar increase in shareholder wealth higher than those of divisional executives. For CEOs, incentives are $5.65 per thousand higher than for executives with divisional responsibility. The aggregate pay-firm performance sensitivity of the top management team is substantial, at $32.32 per thousand for the median firm. CEO incentives are 42 to 58 percent of the aggregate incentives to the top management team. We match a subset of our divisional executives to the divisions they manage. We document a positive pay-divisional performance sensitivity and show that it is increasing in the precision of the divisional performance measure. The pay-firm performance sensitivity for divisional executives is decreasing in the precision of their divisional performance measure. These results are consistent with a principal-agent model with multiple signals of managerial effort.







