We study policies that regulate executive compensation in a model that jointly determines executives effort, compensation and firm leverage. The market failure that justifies regulation is that executives are optimistic about asset prices in states of distress. We show that shareholders propose compensation packages that lead to socially excessive leverage. Say-on-pay regulation does not reduce the incentives for leverage. Regulating the structure of compensation (but not its level) with a cap on the ratio of variable-to-fixed pay delivers the right leverage. However, it is more efficient to directly regulate leverage because restricting the variable compensation impacts managerial effort more than if shareholders are free to design compen...
"Prepared for the Brookings Microeconomics Conference, December 11-12, 1992."Includes bibliographica...
This paper presents three different hypotheses that attempt to explain the CEO compensation structur...
Currently, CEO pay is determined by a company’s board of directors, subject to limited shareholder a...
We study policies that regulate executive compensation in a model that jointly determines executives...
Artículo de revistaThis paper surveys the literature that studies the connection between leverage an...
This paper considers optimal executive pay regulations for banks that are too big-to-fail. Theoretic...
High leverage levels can lead to virtually limitless expansion of bank asset size, which maximizes, ...
This work explores the role of executive compensation in determining the capital structure de-cision...
This paper seeks to make three contributions to understanding how banks’ executive pay has produced ...
This paper proposes a new regulatory approach that implements capital requirements contingent on man...
We hypothesize that managers who receive high equity-based compensation have greater incentive to av...
The beginning of the 21st century rocked financial markets with a series of catastrophic corporate s...
In this paper, I examine the mechanism of extremely high executive compensation based on the concept...
Conventional wisdom among corporate law theorists holds that the presence of a controlling sharehold...
Excessive risk taking by financial institutions has been widely identified as a major cause of the 2...
"Prepared for the Brookings Microeconomics Conference, December 11-12, 1992."Includes bibliographica...
This paper presents three different hypotheses that attempt to explain the CEO compensation structur...
Currently, CEO pay is determined by a company’s board of directors, subject to limited shareholder a...
We study policies that regulate executive compensation in a model that jointly determines executives...
Artículo de revistaThis paper surveys the literature that studies the connection between leverage an...
This paper considers optimal executive pay regulations for banks that are too big-to-fail. Theoretic...
High leverage levels can lead to virtually limitless expansion of bank asset size, which maximizes, ...
This work explores the role of executive compensation in determining the capital structure de-cision...
This paper seeks to make three contributions to understanding how banks’ executive pay has produced ...
This paper proposes a new regulatory approach that implements capital requirements contingent on man...
We hypothesize that managers who receive high equity-based compensation have greater incentive to av...
The beginning of the 21st century rocked financial markets with a series of catastrophic corporate s...
In this paper, I examine the mechanism of extremely high executive compensation based on the concept...
Conventional wisdom among corporate law theorists holds that the presence of a controlling sharehold...
Excessive risk taking by financial institutions has been widely identified as a major cause of the 2...
"Prepared for the Brookings Microeconomics Conference, December 11-12, 1992."Includes bibliographica...
This paper presents three different hypotheses that attempt to explain the CEO compensation structur...
Currently, CEO pay is determined by a company’s board of directors, subject to limited shareholder a...