ECON Webinar - Common Ownership, Competition, and Top Management Incentives
This paper proposes a firm-level mechanism through which common ownership can affect product market outcomes consistent with empirical evidence. We embed a canonical managerial incentive design problem in a model of strategic product market competition under common ownership. Firm-level variation over time in common ownership causes variation in managerial incentives across firms as well as variation in product prices, market shares, concentration, and output across markets—all without communication between shareholders and firms, coordination between firms, or market-specific incentives for managers. We empirically confirm the theoretical prediction that top management incentives are less performancesensitive in firms where large investors hold greater ownership stakes in competitors.
Julie Wong by tel: 2358 7621 or email: fnjuwong@ust.hk