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THE ASSOCIATION BETWEEN THE USE OF SOPHISTICATED CAPITAL BUDGETING PRACTICES AND CORPORATE PERFORMANCE
55
Citations
10
References
2001
Year
BudgetingCorporate Risk ManagementFinancial ManagementFirm PerformanceCapital IntensityCorporate StrategyManagementBusinessEarly 1950SBusiness StrategySophisticated TechniquesFinancial PracticeCorporate GovernanceStrategic ManagementFinanceCapital StructureCorporate FinanceFinancial Structure
Abstract Since the early 1950s, the academic community has tried lo convince corporate managers that there are sophisticated techniques that can improve the capital budgeting decision-making process. Over the years, many studies have documented a trend toward increasing business use of such sophisticated capital budgeting techniques. However, there is no clear evidence whether better performing companies are more likely to employ sophisticated capital budgeting processes than are lower performing companies. This study is an attempt to measure the relationship between capital budgeting sophistication and business performance. It advances upon earlier studies by utilizing a more comprehensive capital budgeting sophistication metric, incorporating industry-adjusted independent variables (firm size, risk, capital intensity, and degree of focus), and by focusing on United States corporations. The results are similar with those of earlier studies; there is no discernible relationship between capital budgeting sophistication and corporate performance.
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