Abstract


 
 
 The problem of managerial short-termism has long preoccupied policymakers, researchers, and practitioners. These groups have given much less attention, however, to the converse problem of managerial long-termism. Michal Barzuza and Eric Talley fill this gap in their pioneering article, Long-Term Bias. Relying on the behavioral finance and psychology literatures, the authors provide a novel and thought-provoking analysis of managerial long-term bias, which may be just as detrimental as the more widely condemned short-term bias.
 This invited Comment to Barzuza and Talley’s article advances three claims. First, it argues that proper incentives— created by executive compensation, heightened risk of early termination, market responses and shareholder pressures— are likely to turn most managers more realistic and thus to mitigate their long-term biases.
 Second, it explains how, in reality, it could be almost impossible to distinguish between long-term bias and traditional agency theories of empire building and pet projects. Ultimately, both long-termist and self-interested managers systematically harm shareholders; both choose to ignore shareholder interests and waste free cash flow on inferior business investments. This also explains why the cure to both long-term bias and agency costs is similar: reducing the relative insulation of the board from shareholders’ disciplinary power.
 
 
 
 Finally, this Comment expresses strong support for most of Barzuza and Talley’s normative conclusions, with one important exception: their acceptance of the use of dual-class stock. With a perpetual lock on control and a limited equity stake, corporate leaders will be immune to any “institutional brake” on all forms of long-termist overinvestment. If anything, the analysis of Barzuza and Talley provides an additional strong justification to oppose the use of perpetual dual-class stock.
 
 
 
 
 

Highlights

  • The problem of managerial short-termism has long preoccupied policymakers, financial economists, governance scholars, and practitioners.[1]

  • Relying on the behavioral finance and psychology literatures, the authors provide a novel analysis of managerial long-term bias

  • Barzuza and Talley supplement their analysis by examining three high-profile case studies that demonstrate the negative implications of managerial overconfidence and illustrate how hedge fund activism could provide “a symbiotic counterballast” against it.[9]

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

The problem of managerial short-termism has long preoccupied policymakers, financial economists, governance scholars, and practitioners.[1]. Consider the three case studies presented by Barzuza and Talley While they can be viewed as examples of managerial long-term bias, an plausible interpretation would view them as examples of pet projects that provided the CEOs of these companies with psychic private benefits. This explains why the cure to both longterm bias and agency costs is similar: reducing the relative insulation of the board from shareholders’ disciplinary power so that shareholders can hold managers accountable when they underperform. Managerial accountability, provides an additional strong justification to oppose the use of dual-class stock: to put an end to founders’ perpetual insulation from shareholder intervention

The Importance of Incentives
Mitigating Factors
Executive Compensation
Market Signals
Risk of Removal
Activist Investors
LONG-TERM BIAS AS A PRIVATE BENEFIT?
IMPLICATIONS
GOING FORWARD
Full Text
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