This paper presents a market equilibrium model of CEO assignment, pay and incentives under risk aversion and heterogeneous moral hazard. Each of the three outcomes can be summarized by a single closed-form equation. In assignment models without moral hazard, allocation depends only on firm size and the equilibrium is efficient. Here, talent assignment is distorted by the agency problem as firms involving higher risk or disutility choose less talented CEOs. Such firms also pay higher salaries in the cross-section, but economy-wide increases in risk or the disutility of being a CEO (e.g. due to regulation) do not affect pay. The strength of incentives depends only on the disutility of effort and is independent of risk and risk aversion. If th...
I examine the relationship between chief executive officer (CEO) incentives and the risk exposure ge...
We estimate a standard principal agent model with constant relative risk aversion and lognormal stoc...
There are two stylized facts that standard theories on executive compensation are inca-pable of expl...
This paper presents a unified theory of both the level and sensitivity of pay in competitive market ...
This paper examines the relation between chief executive officers’ (CEOs’) incentive levels and thei...
We examined the effects of unsystematic and systematic firm risk on CEO compensation risk bearing an...
This paper presents a unified theory of both the level and sensitivity of pay in competitive market ...
This paper identifies the sources and the magnitude of inefficiency in the allocation of CEOs to fir...
This paper presents a uni\u85ed framework for understanding the determinants of both CEO incentives ...
textabstractWe consider a model in which shareholders provide a risk-averse CEO with risktaking ince...
We investigate whether and how managerial risk aversion influences the structuring of the generalist...
We analyze the effects of CEOs' layoff risk on their risk choice while overseeing a firm. A CEO, who...
textabstractThis paper investigates whether observed executive compensation contracts are designed t...
This paper examines the two-way relationship between managerial compensation and corporate risk by e...
We analyze the effects of CEOs' layoff risk on their risk choice while overseeing a firm. A CEO, who...
I examine the relationship between chief executive officer (CEO) incentives and the risk exposure ge...
We estimate a standard principal agent model with constant relative risk aversion and lognormal stoc...
There are two stylized facts that standard theories on executive compensation are inca-pable of expl...
This paper presents a unified theory of both the level and sensitivity of pay in competitive market ...
This paper examines the relation between chief executive officers’ (CEOs’) incentive levels and thei...
We examined the effects of unsystematic and systematic firm risk on CEO compensation risk bearing an...
This paper presents a unified theory of both the level and sensitivity of pay in competitive market ...
This paper identifies the sources and the magnitude of inefficiency in the allocation of CEOs to fir...
This paper presents a uni\u85ed framework for understanding the determinants of both CEO incentives ...
textabstractWe consider a model in which shareholders provide a risk-averse CEO with risktaking ince...
We investigate whether and how managerial risk aversion influences the structuring of the generalist...
We analyze the effects of CEOs' layoff risk on their risk choice while overseeing a firm. A CEO, who...
textabstractThis paper investigates whether observed executive compensation contracts are designed t...
This paper examines the two-way relationship between managerial compensation and corporate risk by e...
We analyze the effects of CEOs' layoff risk on their risk choice while overseeing a firm. A CEO, who...
I examine the relationship between chief executive officer (CEO) incentives and the risk exposure ge...
We estimate a standard principal agent model with constant relative risk aversion and lognormal stoc...
There are two stylized facts that standard theories on executive compensation are inca-pable of expl...