relative performance evaluation;
earnings management;
CEO compensation;
EXECUTIVE-COMPENSATION;
MORAL HAZARD;
AGGREGATION;
FORECASTS;
LUCK;
CEOS;
D O I:
10.1111/1911-3846.12731
中图分类号:
F8 [财政、金融];
学科分类号:
0202 ;
摘要:
Conventional agency theory suggests that firms should benchmark CEO compensation to absorb systemic risk and to more efficiently incentivize executives to work hard. Yet empirical research has found only a modest use of benchmarking in CEO compensation contracts. In this paper, I highlight one weakness of relative performance evaluation (RPE). When earnings management is possible, benchmarking creates stronger incentives for misreporting performance measures compared to benchmark-independent pay. The optimal contract will depend less on a correlated benchmark (e.g., a stock market index) if it is easier for the manager to misreport performance. Thus, the model predicts that firms with weak internal controls and bad auditors are less likely to use RPE, offering a theoretical explanation for the empirically observed lack of RPE use.
机构:
Rice Univ, Jones Grad Sch Business, Accounting Dept, Houston, TX 77005 USARice Univ, Jones Grad Sch Business, Accounting Dept, Houston, TX 77005 USA