The aim of this paper is to study the effects of product market competition on the explicit compensation packages that firms offer to their executives. In order to measure the net effect of competition we use two different identification strategies. The first exploits cross sectoral variation in concentration ratios and the panel nature of the dataset. The second uses as a quasi-natural experiment the deregulations that occurred in the banking and financial sectors in the nineties and estimates differences in differences coefficients. Our results show that a higher level of product market competition increases the performance pay sensitivity of executive compensation schemes, and they hold through a number of performance measures such as st...
Our paper is a further contribution to the still very small empirical literature on the effects of c...
This paper analyzes the interaction between product market competition and family ties on the struct...
This paper investigates the principal-agent model of executive compensation through an empirical stu...
This paper studies the effect of product market competition on the explicit compensation packages th...
This paper studies the effect of deregulation and increased product market competition on the compen...
This paper studies the effect of product market competition on the compensation packages that firms ...
There is an ongoing theoretical debate about whether firm-owners would optimally use stronger or wea...
Deregulation and managerial compensation are two important topics on the political and academic agen...
This paper studies the effect of competition on executive compensation. We estimate the effect of in...
This paper studies the effect of competition on executive compensation. We estimate the effect of i...
I empirically examine the effect of product-market competition in an industry on incentives (defined...
Motivated by empirical evidence, we develop an incentive contracting model under oligopolistic compe...
"Article number: 115"Empirical evidence suggests that executive pay is related to the level of produ...
This paper examines the relationship between the degree of product market competition and the level...
This paper studies the effect of increased product market competition on executive compensation and ...
Our paper is a further contribution to the still very small empirical literature on the effects of c...
This paper analyzes the interaction between product market competition and family ties on the struct...
This paper investigates the principal-agent model of executive compensation through an empirical stu...
This paper studies the effect of product market competition on the explicit compensation packages th...
This paper studies the effect of deregulation and increased product market competition on the compen...
This paper studies the effect of product market competition on the compensation packages that firms ...
There is an ongoing theoretical debate about whether firm-owners would optimally use stronger or wea...
Deregulation and managerial compensation are two important topics on the political and academic agen...
This paper studies the effect of competition on executive compensation. We estimate the effect of in...
This paper studies the effect of competition on executive compensation. We estimate the effect of i...
I empirically examine the effect of product-market competition in an industry on incentives (defined...
Motivated by empirical evidence, we develop an incentive contracting model under oligopolistic compe...
"Article number: 115"Empirical evidence suggests that executive pay is related to the level of produ...
This paper examines the relationship between the degree of product market competition and the level...
This paper studies the effect of increased product market competition on executive compensation and ...
Our paper is a further contribution to the still very small empirical literature on the effects of c...
This paper analyzes the interaction between product market competition and family ties on the struct...
This paper investigates the principal-agent model of executive compensation through an empirical stu...