享受宁静生活?公司治理与管理者偏好

Enjoying the Quiet Life? Corporate Governance and Managerial Preferences

Journal of Political Economy · 2003
被引 3781 · 同刊同年前 3%
人大 A+FT50ABS 4*

中文导读

利用美国各州反收购法带来的公司治理差异,研究发现当管理者免受收购威胁时,工人工资上升、新旧工厂更替减少、生产率和盈利能力下降,表明管理者可能偏好“宁静生活”而非积极扩张。

Abstract

Much of our understanding of corporations builds on the idea that managers, when they are not closely monitored, will pursue goals that are not in shareholders' interests. But what goals would managers pursue? This paper uses variation in corporate governance generated by state adoption of antitakeover laws to empirically map out managerial preferences. We use plant-level data and exploit a unique feature of corporate law that allows us to deal with possible biases associated with the timing of the laws. We find that when managers are insulated from takeovers, worker wages (especially those of white-collar workers) rise. The destruction of old plants falls, but the creation of new plants also falls. Finally, overall productivity and profitability decline in response to these laws. Our results suggest that active empire building may not be the norm and that managers may instead prefer to enjoy the quiet life.

反收购法管理层偏好公司治理企业绩效