Abstract

This study investigates the effect of co-CEO structure on asymmetric cost behavior. A firm’s cost behavior reflects managers’ decision making about resources, which can be influenced by various factors. One of them relates to a manager’s decision to inefficiently reallocate their company’s resources when sales decline in pursuit of their incentives for empire-building and disincentives for downsizing. These inefficient resource allocations may result in asymmetric cost behavior, and ultimately be harmful to a firm’s sustainability. We consider the co-CEO structure as an alternative corporate governance mechanism that prevents managers from making inappropriate decisions. By doing so, we investigate whether the degree of cost stickiness differs between co-CEO and single-CEO structures, and whether the former complements external governance mechanisms, particularly foreign ownership, in mitigating cost stickiness. We analyze data from Korean listed companies for 2000–2013, and find that the cost stickiness is lower in the co-CEO structure than in the single-CEO structure. Thus, the co-CEO structure works as an alternative corporate governance mechanism to control the agency problem by inducing mutual monitoring among co-CEOs. Furthermore, the reduction in cost stickiness is greater for firms with higher foreign ownership, indicating that the co-CEO structure complements external governance mechanisms.

Highlights

  • General Motors (GM), a car manufacturing company, announced that it would lay off more than 14,000 workers in North America

  • While there are many factors which affect the corporate decision of the cost structure, we focus on the co-CEO structure

  • We find that the effect of co-CEOs on sticky cost behavior is only significant in the subsample where foreign ownership is more than the median value

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Summary

Introduction

General Motors (GM), a car manufacturing company, announced that it would lay off more than 14,000 workers in North America. Decisions of cost structure are significantly important to corporate sustainability. While there are many factors which affect the corporate decision of the cost structure, we focus on the co-CEO structure. In a co-CEO structure, two or more CEOs sit on corporations’ top position and make corporate decisions together while corporate decisions are made by only one CEO in solo-CEO firms [1]. There exists a dynamic exchange of lateral influence between multiple CEOs, which increases the likelihood of co-CEO firms’ making different decisions than that of solo-CEO firms [2]. There are many cases of the co-CEO structure. Considering the co-CEO structure as a corporate governance mechanism that controls managers’ pursuit of private interests, we investigate whether the cost behavior in a co-CEO structure differs from that in a single-CEO structure

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