This article develops a model in which firms may commit to disclose varying amounts of two types of information, accuracy information and agency information, and in which a regulator may also mandate disclosures. The resulting analysis provides a way to better understand the relationship between disclosure regulation and social welfare, including issues such as: how disclosure regulation can generate social welfare gains (contra Dye, 1990; Admati & Pfleiderer, 2000), why imposing disclosure requirements on only certain firms and certain information may be efficient, and why stricter mandatory disclosure requirements may be an efficient regulatory response to more robust public securities markets (contra La Porta, Lopez de Silanes, & Shleife...
Should large institutional investors be allowed to have better access to information than small indi...
The corporate governance scandals of 2003 have brought renewed focus on mandatory disclosure. One o...
This paper examines the incentives of a firm to invest in information about the quality of its produ...
It has long been said that market forces alone will result in a problematic under-sharing of informa...
This Article posits that the essential role of securities regulation is to create a competitive mark...
Economic theory generally argues that market forces induce managers to disclose their private inform...
The argument of proprietary costs is commonly used by firms to object against proposed disclosure re...
In public-policy discussions about corporate disclosure, more is typ-ically judged better than less....
In this article we ask: what kind of information and how much of it should firms voluntarily disclos...
Over the past several decades, legislators and regulators have increasingly turned to disclosure sch...
We examine the effects of a variety of mandatory information disclosure regimes on the expected reve...
Mandatory disclosure has been at the core of U.S. securities regulation since its adoption in the ea...
This article analyzes and critiques the federal securities laws\u27 reliance on disclosure as the pr...
Mandatory disclosure has been at the core of U.S. securities regulation since its adoption in the ea...
The paper explores the relationship between disclosure in securities markets and the firm’s need for...
Should large institutional investors be allowed to have better access to information than small indi...
The corporate governance scandals of 2003 have brought renewed focus on mandatory disclosure. One o...
This paper examines the incentives of a firm to invest in information about the quality of its produ...
It has long been said that market forces alone will result in a problematic under-sharing of informa...
This Article posits that the essential role of securities regulation is to create a competitive mark...
Economic theory generally argues that market forces induce managers to disclose their private inform...
The argument of proprietary costs is commonly used by firms to object against proposed disclosure re...
In public-policy discussions about corporate disclosure, more is typ-ically judged better than less....
In this article we ask: what kind of information and how much of it should firms voluntarily disclos...
Over the past several decades, legislators and regulators have increasingly turned to disclosure sch...
We examine the effects of a variety of mandatory information disclosure regimes on the expected reve...
Mandatory disclosure has been at the core of U.S. securities regulation since its adoption in the ea...
This article analyzes and critiques the federal securities laws\u27 reliance on disclosure as the pr...
Mandatory disclosure has been at the core of U.S. securities regulation since its adoption in the ea...
The paper explores the relationship between disclosure in securities markets and the firm’s need for...
Should large institutional investors be allowed to have better access to information than small indi...
The corporate governance scandals of 2003 have brought renewed focus on mandatory disclosure. One o...
This paper examines the incentives of a firm to invest in information about the quality of its produ...