Publication | Open Access
Product Market Competition, Managerial Incentives and Firm Valuation
88
Citations
51
References
2009
Year
Market EquilibriumOrganizational EconomicsLawIndustrial OrganizationIncentive SchemesEconomic AnalysisMonopolistic CompetitionAntitrust EnforcementCompetition IssueEconomicsFirm ValuationFinanceProduct Market CompetitionFirm TheoryIncentive MechanismBusinessBusiness StrategyDynamic CompetitionMarket Power
Abstract This paper contributes to the very small empirical literature on the effects of competition on managerial incentive schemes. Based on a theoretical model that incorporates both strategic interaction between firms and a principal agent relationship, we analyse the relationship between product market competition, incentive schemes and firm valuation. The model predicts a nonlinear relationship between the intensity of product market competition and the strength of managerial incentives. We test the implications of our model empirically based on a unique and hand‐collected dataset comprising over 600 observations on 200 Swiss firms over the 2002–2005 period. Our results suggest that, consistent with the implications of our model, the relation between product market competition and managerial intensive schemes is convex indicating that above a certain level of intensity in product market competition, the marginal effect of competition on the strength of the incentive schemes increases in the level of competition. Moreover, competition is associated with lower firm values. These results are robust to accounting for a potential endogeneity of managerial incentives and firm value in a simultaneous equations framework.
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