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Demski Rhodes Bozanic/Dirsmith Fischer/Qu SnowDemski Rhodes Bozanic/Dirsmith Fischer/Qu Next
Compensation Research in Accounting
Steven HuddartHong Kong Polytechnic University
June 7, 2013
Demski Rhodes Bozanic/Dirsmith Fischer/Qu SnowDemski Rhodes Bozanic/Dirsmith Fischer/Qu Next
Plan
• Channel Demski on endogenization, equilibrium, and the art of modeling
• Give examples from recent and current work and a range of research methods:– Empirical/archival compensation studies (Rhodes)– Regulation of compensation (Bozanic/Dirsmith)– Interaction of individual preferences with compensation
(Fischer/Qu)• Be grateful for my good fortune in teachers, colleagues,
co-authors, and students• Suggest opportunities to do more
Demski Rhodes Bozanic/Dirsmith Fischer/Qu SnowDemski Rhodes Bozanic/Dirsmith Fischer/Qu Next
DEMSKI
Endogenous Expectations
Analytic Modeling in Management AccountingResearch
Demski Rhodes Bozanic/Dirsmith Fischer/Qu SnowDemski Rhodes Bozanic/Dirsmith Fischer/Qu Next
Endogenous ExpectationsAAA Presidential Lecture, August 2003
Demski Rhodes Bozanic/Dirsmith Fischer/Qu SnowDemski Rhodes Bozanic/Dirsmith Fischer/Qu Next
Expectations are the centerpiece of accrual accounting, and expectations about these accruals and their use are the centerpiece of accounting research. Yet in our teaching and in our research we typically employ reduced-form specification of the accounting process, coupled with transparent, largely exogenous expectation structures. The manner in which we estimate "abnormal accruals" or make use of analysts' forecasts are cases in point, as are value relevance, audit judgment, compensation and earnings response studies, and FASB deliberations.
This reliance on largely exogenous expectation structures, I think, needlessly limits the depth and boundaries of our teaching and research. My purpose here is to document this claim, and to argue for a more inclusive approach to our scholarship, one that emphasizes "micro foundations" and an equilibrium view of behavior.
Demski Rhodes Bozanic/Dirsmith Fischer/Qu SnowDemski Rhodes Bozanic/Dirsmith Fischer/Qu Next
In emphasizing the underlying choices, my instinct is to rely on the context, forces, and behaviors involved, to emphasize the micro foundations or calculus of the choice setting, so to speak. Coupled with an equilibrium argument, we then have a picture of endogenous expectations and choices.
Better integrating theoretical and empirical work is the key to the next round of progress, and that is why I stress micro foundations.
This suggests our focus on understanding the nature and use of accounting measures should, ideally, be based on understanding how these choices are made, including the fact that coordinating forces, such as organizational architecture, market clearing, regulation, and education, are at work.
Demski Rhodes Bozanic/Dirsmith Fischer/Qu SnowDemski Rhodes Bozanic/Dirsmith Fischer/Qu Next
The Handbook of Management Accounting Research
• organizational arrangements, including divisionalized structures, alliances and allocation of decision rights
• decision methods and frames• evaluation and compensation, including
costing systems• governance structures• the comparative advantage of the accounting
system with its elaborate, nested controls and professional management.
Demski Rhodes Bozanic/Dirsmith Fischer/Qu SnowDemski Rhodes Bozanic/Dirsmith Fischer/Qu Next
The Ralph test
• Stylize a research project to the point it can be brought into the classroom.
• Is the central question in the research project of any classroom importance?
Demski Rhodes Bozanic/Dirsmith Fischer/Qu SnowDemski Rhodes Bozanic/Dirsmith Fischer/Qu Next
Building a model: an art
Demski Rhodes Bozanic/Dirsmith Fischer/Qu SnowDemski Rhodes Bozanic/Dirsmith Fischer/Qu Next
Expanding the model
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Primacy of the research question
• We face an indescribably rich set of possible questions, so choose carefully.– interesting– potentially important– can be explored in depth if not answered– the research wants to know the answer
• Studying how cash compensation varies with various performance measures is not very interesting.– Consider the total compensation framework.– Compensation comes in many forms and is spread across many
periods.– Various forms of compensation are substitutes.
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RHODES
The Relation Between the Use of Accounting Measures in Debt and Incentive Contracts
Demski Rhodes Bozanic/Dirsmith Fischer/Qu SnowDemski Rhodes Bozanic/Dirsmith Fischer/Qu Next
CEOShareholders
Demski Rhodes Bozanic/Dirsmith Fischer/Qu SnowDemski Rhodes Bozanic/Dirsmith Fischer/Qu Next
Building a model: an art
Demski Rhodes Bozanic/Dirsmith Fischer/Qu SnowDemski Rhodes Bozanic/Dirsmith Fischer/Qu Next
CEO Compensation
Firm Earnings
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Pay for performance sensitivity
PPS is measured using firm-regime-specific regressions with at least five consecutive years:
CashCompensationit = α0 + α1 Earningsit + εit
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Debt contracts influence agents’ actions.
– Beneish and Press (1995) show technical default being costly.
– Dichev and Skinner (2002) suggest managers of firms in both good and bad financial health have incentives to avoid technical default.
– Nini, Sufi and Smith (2012) show a significant increase in CEO turnover is associated with technical default, incremental to the effect of firm performance.
• Interaction to explore: Do debt contracts influence compensation contract design?
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CEOShareholders
Debtholders
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Expanding the model
Demski Rhodes Bozanic/Dirsmith Fischer/Qu SnowDemski Rhodes Bozanic/Dirsmith Fischer/Qu Next
CEO Compensation
Firm Earnings
Covenant Threshold
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Demski Rhodes Bozanic/Dirsmith Fischer/Qu SnowDemski Rhodes Bozanic/Dirsmith Fischer/Qu Next
Results
• CEO pay-for-performance sensitivity with respect to earnings is significantly lower when:– the firm’s debt contracts contain earnings-based
covenants, and– earnings-based covenants usage is more intense in
the firm’s debt contracts.
Demski Rhodes Bozanic/Dirsmith Fischer/Qu SnowDemski Rhodes Bozanic/Dirsmith Fischer/Qu Next
Importance
• Interdependence between accounting measures in two contract settings.
• There is more to compensation than just the contract between the shareholders and manager.– Debt contracts contain terms that implicitly serve to
motivate a CEO.– A fuller measure of a CEO’s incentives considers
incentives from the explicit compensation contract implicit incentives from other contracts.
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BOZANIC/DIRSMITH
The social constitution of regulation: The endogenization of insidertrading laws
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Ways to think about insider trading• How do profit-maximizing agents comply with a given
set of regulations (e.g., Huddart, Ke, and Shi, 2007)?– Treat the regulatory framework as an exogenous
constraint rather than as endogenous.• Specifying different rules in different economic
contexts allows behavior and outcomes to be compared across regulatory regimes (e.g., Huddart, Hughes, and Williams, 20??).
• The roles of agents in the process of moving from one regulatory regime to another, or in the translation of regulatory requirements into rules of the economic game, have not been modeled.
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Overt Regulatory Capture
• A regulatory agency is "captured" when it actually advocates for the interests of those to be regulated, especially large commercial enterprises having much at stake and considerable resources to wield in shaping policy outcomes they prefer, instead of the agency acting in the public's interest.
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Ideological and Social Capture
• Influence of those regulated may be subtle and indirect.
• Those selected for regulatory leadership positions– often come from backgrounds sharing worldviews
with those regulated– interact more with representatives from industries
they regulate
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Regulation is endogenous
• Those regulated seek to influence emerging regulations so that the ultimate impact of the rules is muted or subverted to their advantage, i.e., they "endogenize" the regulations.
• Endogenization is an on-going, recursive process marked by moves and counter-moves among contending factions.
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Illustration: SEC Rule 10b5-1
• Prohibits company officers from trading in their company’s stock while in "knowing possession" of material, nonpublic information.
• Those subject to 10b5 effectively influenced this regulation (e.g., by way of successfully advocating for an affirmative defense provided for so-called "planned trades").
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Processes
• What are the social dynamics by which those subject to regulation seek to influence the institutional rules of the game embedded in regulations?
Demski Rhodes Bozanic/Dirsmith Fischer/Qu SnowDemski Rhodes Bozanic/Dirsmith Fischer/Qu Next
Endogenization processesCivil Rights ActEqual employment opportunity
• Disenfranchised• Court theories
– disparate treatment– disparate impact– sexual harassment
• Exploiting ambiguity ex post• Professionals negotiate the
meaning of EEO passively via “best practices”– grievance procedures– anti-harassment policies– formal hiring practices
Securities and Exchange ActInsider trade
• Super-enfranchised• Court theories
– awareness– knowing possession– use
• Seeking specificity ex ante• Professionals negotiate the
meaning insider trade actively by influencing rule-writing– safe harbors– affirmative defenses– 10b5-1 planned trades
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Interpretation
• The SEC was more responsive to those to be regulated by the new insider trading regulation than those whom this regulation was intended to protect from trading abuse.– While the vast majority of letters were received
from non-credentialed sources, letters from credentialed actors were typically negative, and these negative letters were the letters the SEC overwhelmingly cited (by a margin of 78%) as having influenced its deliberations.
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Endogenization of regulation
• Justice– Government is responsive to those regulated.
• Injustice– Government is differentially responsive.
Demski Rhodes Bozanic/Dirsmith Fischer/Qu SnowDemski Rhodes Bozanic/Dirsmith Fischer/Qu Next
Conclusion
• The institutional environment affects those regulated.
• Those regulated play an active role in defining, creating, and shaping the institutional environment
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Directions
• Research might:– probe the ex ante influence of those regulated on the
regulations that are to constrain their behavior– examine the full range of regulatee action strategies– Compensation examples: “say on pay,” board composition
rules, and rules and practices governing incentives for excessive risk (e.g., clawbacks)
– Examine whether the SEC avoids endogenization by selectively:• engaging in differential enforcement• issuing interpretive and procedural rules that do not require public
input proceedings• expressing general statements of policy
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FISCHER/QU
Optimal contracting with endogenous social norms
Rotten apples and sterling examples: Moral reasoning and peer influences on honesty in budget reporting
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What guides behavior?
• Traditional economic models incorporate– contractual incentives– legal incentives– reputation considerations
• Individuals have innate preferences to conform to the behavior of their peers.
• Psychology/sociology models also incorporate– injunctive norms of behavior– empirical norms of behavior
Demski Rhodes Bozanic/Dirsmith Fischer/Qu SnowDemski Rhodes Bozanic/Dirsmith Fischer/Qu Next
Norms for all kinds of acts• Desirable action: Kim, Morse, and Zingales (2006):
– Academics’ research productivity is influenced by the cultural norm of the department that houses them.
• Undesirable action: Fisman and Miguel (2006):– Differing propensities of Nigerian and Norwegian diplomats posted to
New York City to accumulate unpaid parking tickets– Social norms related to corruption are significant and persistent
because diplomats behave like others in their home countries.• Undesirable action: Chen and Sandino (2011)
– Retail theft and collusive retail theft by employees is lower when pay is higher.
– higher wages have the direct effect of curbing employee theft and also promote an ethical environment among coworkers
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Incorporating Norms in an Economic Model: Two Modeling Issues
• How do norms drive behavior?– Individuals incur psychic costs associated with
undesirable actions.• What determines norms?
– The cost incurred is due, in part, to how others in the group behave when faced with the same action choice. Hence, norms are endogenous.
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Kohlberg’s (1969) Theory of Moral Reasoning
• Pre-conventional: responds to individual rewards and penalties
• Conventional: desire to respect group norms of behavior
• Post-conventional: motivated by personal principles and values
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Assumptions
• Principal employs a set of agents• Each agent i takes 2 actions
– Desired action, ai – Undesired action, ui
• Principal would like to induce a desired action level, ai, without inducing the undesired action, ui.
• The cost of the desired action to the principal is k(ui) where k > 0
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Assumptions
Contract Form: wi + bi r(ai,ui )
wi is fixed wage
bi is incentive parameter
ri is report of performance
Principal bears directly the consequences of the agents actions and, indirectly, the costs to the agents of implementing them
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Assumptions
• Risk-neutral agent maximizes pay net of personal cost of actions
• wi + bi r(ai,ui ) – f(ai – Nai ) – f(ui + Nui )
• where
f(x) is the cost of the act
Nai is psychic cost to i due to norm for action a
Demski Rhodes Bozanic/Dirsmith Fischer/Qu SnowDemski Rhodes Bozanic/Dirsmith Fischer/Qu Next
Assumptions
• Norm of behavior, Ni, satisfies
• Ni = (1 – ai)Ai – aiS, where
Ai represents the personal standard of agent i
S is the endogenous average behavior of the peer group, i.e., the empirical norm
ai [0,1) represents extent to which agent is conventional
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Features• Undesirable action, ui, favorably influences
performance measure used for contracting.
• Undesirable action is costly to the principal.
• Undesirable action choice is influenced by a personal norm of behavior, Ai, and a social norm of behavior, S.
• The weight on the social norm, ai, measures the extent to which the agent is conventional.
• Social norm of behavior is endogenous—it depends upon how agents behave within the organization.
Demski Rhodes Bozanic/Dirsmith Fischer/Qu SnowDemski Rhodes Bozanic/Dirsmith Fischer/Qu Next
Findings
• Spillover effects arise from incentive contracts when social norms are endogenous.– High-powered incentives imply less effective social
norms.• Post-conventional preferred when incentives
are high.• Conventional preferred when incentives are
low.
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Findings
• Norms for desirable action multiplies the benefits of financial incentives, while the presence of a norm for undesirable action reduces the benefits.
• Agents’ relative sensitivities to each type of norm determines whether it is beneficial to split an organization apart to foster different norms in each part.
• Differences in sensitivity to social norms create a costly adverse selection problem when the differences pertain to social norms for undesirable actions, but not when the differences pertain to social norms for desirable actions.
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Foundational Questions• How and to what extent are
individuals influenced by honest (or dishonest) example set by peers?
• How do individuals’ responses to the actions of others vary across moral types?
• How does susceptibility to external social influences vary with one’s personal standard?
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Contributions• Probe with an experiment the validity of
assumptions about individual preferences that underlie such models as Fischer & Huddart (2008).
• Examine how individual traits such as moral types explains heterogeneous reporting behavior and susceptibility to social influences.
• Extend ethics research in accounting by linking moral types to practical reporting outcomes.
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Budget Reporting Experiment
• Experimental setup– Participants play the role of managers
• Observe private cost C perfectly• Submit budget report R to headquarters• Maximum cost is 6 and minimum cost is 4.
– Economic Incentive (in Lira)• Fixed salary+budget slack:1000+1000*(Report-Cost)
• Prior experimental evidence(Evans et al. 2001)– Reports are partially honest
• Reporting Honesty=1.00- (Report-Cost)/(6-Cost) • Average honesty is 0.45.
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Budget Experiment with Peers
• Peer group– Half the subjects are managers of
Division A• Observe own cost and submit budget
reports
• Treatment group– Half the subjects are managers of
Division B • Stage 1: observe own division’s cost and
submit a report (uninformed report)• Stage 2: observe Division A’s cost and
report, submit a second report ( informed report)
subject to social pressure
subject to social influence
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Experimental procedure
Period 1Peer 1: see own cost and report(Peer Honesty)
Manager: see own cost and report (Uninformed Honesty)
Manager: see peer 1’s cost & report, and report (Informed Honesty)
Period 2Peer 2: see own cost report(Peer Honesty)
Manager: see own cost and report(Uninformed Honesty)
Within-Period Change
Between-Period Change
Manager: see peer 2’s cost & report, and report (Informed Honesty)
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Average Changes in Honesty Conditional on Peer Behavior
Peer Less Honest(Peer Honesty - Uninformed Honesty < -0.1)
Peer More Honest(Peer Honesty - Uninformed Honesty > 0.1)
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Personal standards: Reporting honesty without social information
Average honesty of uninformed reports in period 1, by Kohlbergian type
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Between-period change in honesty by moral types
Averages computed from responses in periods 1–4, by Kohlbergian type.
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Measuring Moral Development: Heinz Dilemma
• Heinz's wife was near death, and her only hope was a drug that had been discovered by a pharmacist who was selling it for an exorbitant price. The drug cost $20,000 to make, and the pharmacist was selling it for $200,000. Heinz could only raise $50,000 and insurance wouldn't make up the difference. He offered what he had to the pharmacist, and when his offer was rejected, Heinz said he would pay the rest later. Still the pharmacist refused. In desperation, Heinz considered stealing the drug.
• Would it be wrong for him to do that? Should Heinz have broken into the store to steal the drug for his wife? Why or why not?[
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Findings
• Reporting honesty in the absence of social information about peers varies by Kohlbergian type, but not monotonically in p-score.
• Reductions in honesty in response to “bad apples” is strong and pervasive. Strongest among pre-conventional types.
• Improvements in honesty in response to “shining examples” is significant, but only among conventional types.
• Norms and pay together shape outcomes
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T3b–Evolution of honesty (between)
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Directions
• What is most salient in forming norms?– the most recent example– the most extreme behavior– the most consistent behavior
• How does an empirical norm evolve?– option backdating– earnings management
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NEXT: SAVAGE/ELLSBERG/KLIBANOFF ET AL./SNOW
Foundations of Statistics
Risk, Ambiguity, and the Savage Axioms
A Smooth Model of Decision Making under Ambiguity
On the possibility of profitable self-selection contracts incompetitive insurance markets
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Ellsberg Definitions
Uncertainty
Unmeasurable uncertainty:Ambiguity
A lack of confidence in estimates of relative
likelihoods.
Measurable uncertainty:Risk
Probabilties (objective or subjective) can be formed
for events
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Savage’s P2: sure-thing principleHigh AmbiguityUrn 1: 100 red and black balls
Pure risk Urn 2: 50 red balls and 50 black balls
?
?
Which bet do you prefer?a) Draw a ball from Urn 1. Get $100 if is RED; otherwise nothing.b) Draw a ball from Urn 2. Get $100 if is RED; otherwise nothing.
Which bet do you prefer?c) Draw a ball from Urn 1. Get $100 if is BLACK; otherwise nothing.d) Draw a ball from Urn 2. Get $100 if is BLACK; otherwise nothing.
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Formalization of Ambiguity Aversion and Applications to Contracting
Klibanoff, Marinacci, Mukerji (2005)
Snow (2010) applies this to insurance contracting.Compensation contracting is a dual problem and seems ripe and open.
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Recap
• Channel Demski on endogenization, equilibrium, and the art of modeling
• Give examples from recent and current work and a range of research methods:– Empirical/archival compensation studies (Rhodes)– Regulation of compensation (Bozanic/Dirsmith)– Interaction of individual preferences with compensation
(Fischer/Qu)• Be grateful for my good fortune in teachers, colleagues,
co-authors, and students• Suggest opportunities to do more