Current Search: Industrial productivity--Evaluation (x)
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Title
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The link between CEO compensation, CEO resource allocation decisions, and firm performance.
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Creator
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Dahmus, Sue Ann., Florida Atlantic University, Golden, Peggy A.
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Abstract/Description
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The relationship between the compensation (total and percent at risk) of 240 CEOs from 1986 to 1991, and several CEO resource allocation decisions (R&D, advertising, employees, business segments, and acquisitions) and subsequent firm performance was explored. The firms (Forbes-CEOs of the largest 800 public companies) had the same CEO for the entire period. The resource allocation decisions and the measures of firm performance (ROA, ROE, ROI, ROS, cashflow/sales, and stock return) were...
Show moreThe relationship between the compensation (total and percent at risk) of 240 CEOs from 1986 to 1991, and several CEO resource allocation decisions (R&D, advertising, employees, business segments, and acquisitions) and subsequent firm performance was explored. The firms (Forbes-CEOs of the largest 800 public companies) had the same CEO for the entire period. The resource allocation decisions and the measures of firm performance (ROA, ROE, ROI, ROS, cashflow/sales, and stock return) were obtained from COMPUSTAT. The number of acquisitions was obtained from Mergers and Acquisitions. The percent of CEO compensation at risk was found to be associated with the change in R&D and the change in the number of business segments. Total CEO compensation was found to be positively associated with the change in advertising expenses, the change in the number of employees, and the change in the number of acquisitions. A principal components analysis indicated that the performance measures loaded on two factors, representing firm profitability and returns to stockholders. The relationship between CEO compensation and firm performance was explored using two stage simultaneous equations. The model considered the effects of prior firm performance on the relationship. The amount of total CEO compensation and the percent of CEO compensation at risk were found to be positively associated with subsequent firm profitability for several years. Total CEO compensation and the percent of CEO compensation at risk were positively associated with subsequent return to stockholders in one year. However, the results were not consistent across all the years of the study and the amounts of firm performance explained by the models were small.
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Date Issued
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1994
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PURL
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http://purl.flvc.org/fcla/dt/12393
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Subject Headings
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Chief executive officers--Salaries, etc--United States, Executives--Salaries, etc--United States, Incentives in industry--United States, Executive ability, Industrial productivity--Evaluation
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Format
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Document (PDF)