Centre for Economic Policy Research
The problem of compensation and incentives
Download 1.95 Mb. Pdf ko'rish
|
geneva5
5.8.2
The problem of compensation and incentives Central to the decision of the degree of corporate separation is the problem of setting the incentives and compensation for managers. The pre-1933 experience in the United States of universal banking shows, in extreme form, the dangers when incentives are not adequately aligned for managers. The ability of officers and directors to benefit from establishing their own partnerships that participated in syndicates with their insurance companies and securities affiliates 72 Conflicts of Interest in the Financial Services Industry created unusual opportunities for exploiting conflicts of interest. The partnerships established by officers of Enron are the contemporary equivalents. The conflicts are blatant as they provide compensation to officers that directly diminish the revenues of their companies. These problems may be eliminated either by regula- tion or ensuring that relationships are sufficiently transparent to the shareholders. Within a bank, incentives also need to be properly aligned. If there is a booming stock market, with soaring revenues from IPOs, any misalignment of compensation of executives within a firm may induce an exploitation of conflicts of interest. As seen in Chapter 2, underwriters may pressure analysts and commercial bankers to assist them. How to design a management compensation scheme that maximizes shareholder value is the central problem. While there is no simple guidebook, the example of the National City Bank’s management fund is an insightful approach. By pooling the revenues from commercial and investment banking and allotting them to the shareholders and managers in a fixed ratio, managers were treated as large shareholders. There was no incentive for them to favour one unit of the bank over the other unless it maximized shareholder wealth. One danger that arises from even the best-designed management compensa- tion system is if the time horizon of managers differs from shareholders. Managers might be willing to favour underwriting customers over depositors, brokerage clients or insurance policy holders if the profits from underwriting are high in the short-run and they have a short-run horizon. In this case, they will not be con- cerned about the long-term reputational effects of this favouritism on commercial banking, brokerage or insurance. Whether shareholders can effectively monitor managers to ensure that their behaviour is aligned with maintaining the reputa- tion and value of the firm depends on the bank’s transparency and disclosure. Download 1.95 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
Ma'lumotlar bazasi mualliflik huquqi bilan himoyalangan ©fayllar.org 2024
ma'muriyatiga murojaat qiling
ma'muriyatiga murojaat qiling