We consider the problem of control of access to a firm's productive asset, embedding the decision makers into a structure of formal authority relationships.Within such a structure, decision makers act as principal to some decision makers, while they act as agent to other decision makers.We study under which conditions decision makers exercise their own authority and accept their superiors' authority.We distinguish two types of behavior.First, we investigate a non-cooperative equilibrium concept describing explicit exercise of authority. Second, we consider the possibility of subordinates to submit themselves to authority even though such authority is not enforced explicitly
We analyze a model of hierarchies in organizations in which neither decisions nor the delegation of ...
In a typical corporate hierarchy, the manager is delegated the authority to make strategic decisions...
We formalize a conception of authority, which is commonly defined as the right of controlling a pers...
We show that decision making in organizations is typically more complicated than simply choosing eit...
We survey the contract theory literature on the notion of authority inside rms. This literature is c...
This paper proposes a theory of the firm in which a firm’s centralized asset ownership and low-power...
This paper examines empirically the impact of authority structures on the use of accounting informat...
"This paper studies organizations with autocratic decisionmaking, i.e., where superiors make the dec...
In most firms, if not all, workers are divided asymmetrically in terms of authority and responsibili...
This paper presents a theory of the allocation of authority in an organization in which centralizati...
Starting from the separation between formal and real authority, the paper considers a hierarchical r...
Authority relationships are viewed as reciprocal exchange in which a principal offers rents in retur...
This paper tests the predictions of economic theory on the determinants of the allocation of decisio...
This paper presents a theory of the allocation of authority in an organization in which centralizati...
This paper studies the effects of open disagreement on motivation and coordination. It shows how - i...
We analyze a model of hierarchies in organizations in which neither decisions nor the delegation of ...
In a typical corporate hierarchy, the manager is delegated the authority to make strategic decisions...
We formalize a conception of authority, which is commonly defined as the right of controlling a pers...
We show that decision making in organizations is typically more complicated than simply choosing eit...
We survey the contract theory literature on the notion of authority inside rms. This literature is c...
This paper proposes a theory of the firm in which a firm’s centralized asset ownership and low-power...
This paper examines empirically the impact of authority structures on the use of accounting informat...
"This paper studies organizations with autocratic decisionmaking, i.e., where superiors make the dec...
In most firms, if not all, workers are divided asymmetrically in terms of authority and responsibili...
This paper presents a theory of the allocation of authority in an organization in which centralizati...
Starting from the separation between formal and real authority, the paper considers a hierarchical r...
Authority relationships are viewed as reciprocal exchange in which a principal offers rents in retur...
This paper tests the predictions of economic theory on the determinants of the allocation of decisio...
This paper presents a theory of the allocation of authority in an organization in which centralizati...
This paper studies the effects of open disagreement on motivation and coordination. It shows how - i...
We analyze a model of hierarchies in organizations in which neither decisions nor the delegation of ...
In a typical corporate hierarchy, the manager is delegated the authority to make strategic decisions...
We formalize a conception of authority, which is commonly defined as the right of controlling a pers...