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논문검색

CEO Power and Decision-Making under Pressure

초록

영어

Are powerful CEOs more effective in responding to pressure from the economic environment? Concentrating decision-making power may facilitate rapid decision-making. However, the quality of decision-making may be compromised, with severe consequences for the firm if a powerful CEO is less likely to receive independent advice or to have his decisions scrutinized. We empirically investigate the relation between CEO power and decision-making under pressure by examining firm performance when industry conditions deteriorate. We focus on industry downturns since these represent an exogenous ‘shock’ to a firm’s environment. The decision making context is important and we focus on three settings where the net effect of CEO power is likely more consequential: when the firm is innovative and decision making is likely more complex, when the industry is competitive and poor decisions can be more serious in terms of firm value and when the industry is characterized by high managerial discretion. In these settings powerful CEOs are found to perform significantly worse than other CEOs during industry downturns -- suggesting contexts in which centralized decision-making is potentially of greater concern.

목차

Abstract
 INTRODUCTION
 THEORY AND HYPOTHESES
  CEO power, innovativeness and shocks
  The impact of competition
  The impact of managerial discretion
 RESEARCH METHOD
  Sample
  Model and dependent variable
  Main independent variables
  Industry shock identification
 RESULTS
 DISCUSSION AND CONCLUSIONS
 REFERENCES
 TABLE
 FIGURE

저자정보

  • Vikram Nanda College of Management, Georgia Institute of Technology
  • Sabatino Silveri School of Management, Binghamton University - SUNY
  • Seonghee Han School of Management, Binghamton University - SUNY

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