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Agency Theory and Executive Pay - The Remuneration Committee's Dilemma

English · Hardback

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Description

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This new book examines the relationship between agency theory and executive pay. It argues that while Jensen and Meckling (1976) were right in their analysis of the agency problem in public corporations they were wrong about the proposed solutions. Drawing on ideas from economics, psychology, sociology and the philosophy of science, the author explains how standard agency theory has contributed to the problem of executive pay rather than solved it. The book explores why companies should be regarded as real entities not legal fictions, how executive pay in public corporations can be conceptualised as a collective action problem and how behavioral science can help in the design of optimal incentive arrangements. An insightful and revolutionary read for those researching corporate governance, HRM and organisation theory, this useful book offers potential solutions to some of the problems with executive pay and the standard model of agency. 

  

List of contents

1. Agency Costs, Coordination Problems and the Remuneration Committee's Dilemma.- 2. What's Wrong with Agency Theory?.- 3. What a Public Corporation Really Is.- 4. Executive Pay as a Collective Action Problem.- 5. Behavioural Agency Theory.- 6. The Modern Corporation's Final Chapter.

About the author

Alexander Pepper is Professor of Management Practice at the London School of Economics and Political Science, UK.  He previously had a long career at PwC, where he was a global leader of PwC’s Human Resource Services consulting practice from 2002-2006.  He has authored two books, Senior Executive Reward (2006), and The Economic Psychology of Incentives published by Palgrave Macmillan in 2015.

Summary

This new book examines the relationship between agency theory and executive pay. It argues that while Jensen and Meckling (1976) were right in their analysis of the agency problem in public corporations they were wrong about the proposed solutions. Drawing on ideas from economics, psychology, sociology and the philosophy of science, the author explains how standard agency theory has contributed to the problem of executive pay rather than solved it. The book explores why companies should be regarded as real entities not legal fictions, how executive pay in public corporations can be conceptualised as a collective action problem and how behavioral science can help in the design of optimal incentive arrangements. An insightful and revolutionary read for those researching corporate governance, HRM and organisation theory, this useful book offers potential solutions to some of the problems with executive pay and the standard model of agency. 

  

Product details

Authors Alexander Pepper
Publisher Springer, Berlin
 
Languages English
Product format Hardback
Released 30.11.2018
 
EAN 9783319999685
ISBN 978-3-31-999968-5
No. of pages 133
Dimensions 152 mm x 15 mm x 217 mm
Weight 290 g
Illustrations XI, 133 p. 8 illus.
Subjects Social sciences, law, business > Business > Business administration

C, Planning, Human Resource Management, Organization, Business and Management, Corporate Governance, Zoology & animal sciences, Organizational theory & behaviour, Personnel & human resources management, Personnel Management, Behavioral Sciences, Management science, Behaviourism, Behavioural theory, Behavioral Genetics

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