JEL No. G32,G38,M41 An objective of many proposed corporate governance reforms is increased transparency. This goal has been relatively uncontroversial, as most observers believe increased transparency to be unambiguously good. We argue that, from a corporate governance perspective, there are likely to be both costs and benefits to increased transparency, leading to an optimum level beyond which increasing transparency lowers profits. This result holds even when there is no direct cost of increasing transparency and no issue of revealing information to regulators or product-market rivals. We show that reforms that seek to increase transparency can reduce firm profits, raise executive compensation, and inefficiently increase the rate of CEO ...
International audienceTransparency is an unquestionable value for corporate social responsibility (C...
The Transparency Amendment, included in the Dodd‐Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Ac...
Firms that are more highly levered are forced to raise capital more often, a process that leads to t...
In public-policy discussions about corporate disclosure, more is typ-ically judged better than less....
Recent public policy debates have led to increased calls for full transparency of executive compensa...
We examine whether greater transparency leads to improved evaluation and rewarding of management. We...
Recent public policy debates have led to increased calls for full transparency of executive compensa...
In this paper we study when it is advantageous to improve corporate transparency by allowing shareho...
Corporate disclosure and reporting of information has become synonymous with transparency which in d...
INTRODUCTION A lack of transparency in financial reports has often been cited as a weakness of capi...
This paper explores a firm’s reliance on internal and external governance mechanisms as part of the ...
Corporate governance matters because how well corporations utilize the people’s savings matters. Man...
This research investigates the determinants and consequences of compensation disclosure in the conte...
AbstractCorporate governance matters because how well corporations utilize the people's savings matt...
Although recent research documents a positive relation between corporate transparency and the propor...
International audienceTransparency is an unquestionable value for corporate social responsibility (C...
The Transparency Amendment, included in the Dodd‐Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Ac...
Firms that are more highly levered are forced to raise capital more often, a process that leads to t...
In public-policy discussions about corporate disclosure, more is typ-ically judged better than less....
Recent public policy debates have led to increased calls for full transparency of executive compensa...
We examine whether greater transparency leads to improved evaluation and rewarding of management. We...
Recent public policy debates have led to increased calls for full transparency of executive compensa...
In this paper we study when it is advantageous to improve corporate transparency by allowing shareho...
Corporate disclosure and reporting of information has become synonymous with transparency which in d...
INTRODUCTION A lack of transparency in financial reports has often been cited as a weakness of capi...
This paper explores a firm’s reliance on internal and external governance mechanisms as part of the ...
Corporate governance matters because how well corporations utilize the people’s savings matters. Man...
This research investigates the determinants and consequences of compensation disclosure in the conte...
AbstractCorporate governance matters because how well corporations utilize the people's savings matt...
Although recent research documents a positive relation between corporate transparency and the propor...
International audienceTransparency is an unquestionable value for corporate social responsibility (C...
The Transparency Amendment, included in the Dodd‐Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Ac...
Firms that are more highly levered are forced to raise capital more often, a process that leads to t...