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Corporate Strategy and Incentives
Assuming the CEO of a large, publicly-traded manufacturing firm has a bonus tied to the firm's stock price over the next 12 months, which of the two strategies described below is the CEO's personal financial interest most aligned with? Explain how this scenario illustrates a potential problem that can arise when the people who run a company are not its primary owners.
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Social Science
Empirical Science
Science
Economy
CORE Econ
Economics
Introduction to Microeconomics Course
The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
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Conflict of Interest: Owners vs. Managers
Assessment on the Separation of Ownership and Control
A publicly-traded company is run by a professional CEO who is not a major shareholder. The CEO decides to use company profits to acquire a lavish new corporate headquarters, a move that enhances the prestige of the management team but is unlikely to increase the company's long-term profitability. Many of the company's shareholders, who are the legal owners, are displeased as they would have preferred that money to be paid out as dividends. Which of the following statements provides the best analysis of the organizational structure that allows this situation to occur?
CEO Incentives and Corporate Strategy
In the context of a large firm, match each description to the group it most accurately characterizes, based on the principle that the group that owns the firm may be different from the group that runs it.
Evaluating the Modern Corporate Structure
Describing the Modern Firm's Structure
In a firm where ownership is separated from control, the primary objective of those who control the firm's day-to-day operations is always to maximize the financial returns for the owners.
Evaluating a Corporate Merger
In many large corporations, the individuals who provide the capital and legally own the firm are a different group from the professional executives who are hired to run it. Which of the following outcomes is a potential problem that arises specifically from this division?
Corporate Strategy and Incentives
In many modern firms, the group of individuals who legally own the company by providing its financial capital is distinct from the group of professional executives who are hired to make day-to-day operational and strategic decisions. This common corporate structure is known as the 'separation of ownership and ____'.
Principal-Agent Problem
Separation of Ownership and Control as a Cause of Conflict of Interest