Abstract:
This
Article develops an account of the role and significance of managerial
power and rent extraction in executive compensation. Under the
optimal contracting approach to executive compensation, which
has dominated academic research on the subject, pay arrangements
are set by a board of directors that aims to maximize shareholder
value. In contrast, the managerial power approach suggests that
boards do not operate at arms length in devising executive
compensation arrangements; rather, executives have power to influence
their own pay, and they use that power to extract rents. Furthermore,
the desire to camouflage rent extraction might lead to
the use of inefficient pay arrangements that provide suboptimal
incentives and thereby hurt shareholder value. The authors show
that the processes that produce compensation arrangements, and
the various market forces and constraints that act on these processes,
leave managers with considerable power to shape their own pay
arrangements. Examining the large body of empirical work on executive
compensation, the authors show that managerial power and the desire
to camouflage rents can explain significant features of the executive
compensation landscape, including ones that have long been viewed
as puzzling or problematic from the optimal contracting perspective.
The authors conclude that the role managerial power plays in the
design of executive compensation is significant and should be
taken into account in any examination of executive pay arrangements
or of corporate governance generally.