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Table:
Managerial transaction cost The exchange between the managers and their principals is imperfect
to the degree that it is associated with managerial transaction costs. The
following lists some of often mentioned managerial transaction costs. Go back to figure explaining the main issues
of the managerial agency problem. |
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The fact that principals need to
spend money monitoring the managers (Jensen and Meckling [1976]). Alternatively, it may be the loss of
performance from being unable to monitor perfectly as in the case of
asymmetric information. |
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Perquisite consumption
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An expression for managers who give themselves more luxury than would
seem reasonably from the principals' point of view. For instance, corporate
jets and huge offices with expensive art (Jensen and Meckling [1976]). |
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For instance, the managers may
pursue technological leadership in a field not because it is the most
profitable thing to do but because they derive private benefits from it
(Jensen and Murphy [1990, page 243]). |
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Free cash flow dispersion |
Jensen [1986, page 323] defines
the free cash flow, as the “…cash
flow in excess of that required to fund all projects that have a positive net
present value when discounted at the relevant cost of capital.” The
dispersion of this cash happens because managers starts using the free cash
flow to invest in negative net present value projects simply because they
derive personal utility from working with the money rather than from paying
it to the shareholders. |
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Hampered capital access |
Managers may prefer not to expand the capital of the firm,
although they have many unexploited positive net present value projects. This
is so in circumstances in which the managers believe that a capital expansion
will reduce their control over the company. |
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Replacement resistance
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Managers who ought to resign because there are other and
more qualified people around may use their advantage of being in charge to
prevent others from getting their jobs. |
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Resistance to profitable liquidation or merger |
Managers may try to prevent profitable
liquidations or mergers simply because they know that such decisions would
mean the end of their job. |
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Equally good managers may be
fighting over positions and thereby draw valuable time away from the main
objective, namely to run the firm efficiently. |
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Excessive risk taking |
It has been argued that managers may take excessive
risks when they are owners themselves because equity in a leveraged firm
basically is a call option whose value (ceteris
paribus) increases the more risky the business (Black and Scholes
[1973]). Click
for numerical examples of excessive control. |
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This is also called a sweetheart
deal. It is the phenomenon that managers use their power in one company to
make favorable deals with another company that they own in order to transfer
wealth to themselves (Boycko, Shleifer and Vishny [1993]). |
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Managers may derive more
personal utility from managing a big company rather than a small company and
may therefore be willing to trade off efficiency (read profits) with higher
growth. This extra utility from managing a large firm rater than a small firm
could, for instance, be explained by the fact that managers of large firms on
average are paid more than managers of small firms. |
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Excessive diversification |
Managers may start to engage in excessive diversification because
competition laws (antitrust laws) prevent them from growing more in their
core industry (Morck, Shleifer and Vishny [1990]). |
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- Copyright 1997-2008, ViamInvest. Reproduced with permission of the copyright owner. Further reproduction prohibited without permission. Legal notice. |
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