Publication | Closed Access
Managerial Incentives and Internal Capital Markets
58
Citations
15
References
2003
Year
Whole FirmFirm PerformanceCorporate Risk ManagementCorporate StrategyManagementBusinessOrganizational EconomicsManagerial EconomyCost Of CapitalBusiness StrategyCorporate GovernanceFree RideManagerial IncentivesExternal AssessmentFinanceQuantitative ManagementCorporate FinanceCorporate Innovation
Abstract Capital budgeting in multidivisional firms depends on the external assessment of the whole firm, as well as on headquarters' assessment of the divisions. While corporate headquarters may create value by directly monitoring divisions, the external assessment of the firm is a public good for division managers who, consequently, are tempted to free ride. As the number of divisions increases, the free‐rider problem is aggravated, and internal capital markets substitute for external capital markets in the provision of managerial incentives. The analysis relates the value of diversification to characteristics of the firm, the industry, and the capital market.
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