
Managerial Economics 13th Edition by James McGuigan,Charles Moyer,Frederick Harris
Edition 13ISBN: 978-1285420929
Managerial Economics 13th Edition by James McGuigan,Charles Moyer,Frederick Harris
Edition 13ISBN: 978-1285420929 Exercise 20
Designing a Managerial Incentives Contract
Specific Electric Co. asks you to implement a pay-for-performance incentive contract for its new CEO and four EVPs on the Executive Committee. The five managers can either work really hard with 70 hour weeks at a personal opportunity cost of $200,000 in reduced personal entrepreneurship and increased stress-related health care costs or they can reduce effort, thereby avoiding the personal costs. The CEO and EVPs face three possible random outcomes: the probability of the company experiencing good luck is 30 percent, medium luck is 40 percent, and bad luck is 30 percent. Although the senior management team can distinguish the three "states" of luck as the quarter unfolds, the Compensation Committee of the Board of Directors (and the shareholders) cannot do so. Once the board designs an incentive contract, soon thereafter the good, medium, or bad luck occurs, and thereafter the senior managers decide to expend high or reduced work effort. One of the observable shareholder values listed below then results.
Assume the company has 10 million shares outstanding offered at a $65 initial share price, implying a $650,000,000 initial shareholder value. Since the EVPs and CEOs effort and the company's luck are unobservable to the owners and company directors, it is not possible when the company's share price falls to $50 and the company's value to $500,000,000 to distinguish whether the company experienced reduced effort and medium luck or high effort and bad luck. Similarly, it is not possible to distinguish reduced effort and good luck from high effort and medium luck.
Answer the following questions from the perspective of a member of the Compensation Committee of the board of directors who is aligned with shareholders' interests and is deciding on a performance-based pay plan (an "incentive contract") for the CEO and EVPs.
If the bonus compensation scheme must be announced in advance, and if you must pick one of the three choices in questions, which one would you pick and why In other words, under incomplete information, what is the optimal decision by the Board's Compensation Committee dedicated to act in the shareholders' interest
If you decide to pay 1 percent of this amount (in Question) as a cash bonus, what performance level (what share price or shareholder value) in the table should trigger the bonus Suppose you decide to elicit high effort by paying a bonus should the company's value rise to $800,000,000. What two criticisms can you see of this incentive contract plan
What is the maximum amount it would be worth to shareholders to elicit high effort all of the time rather than reduced effort all of the time
Suppose you decide to elicit high effort by paying a bonus only for an increase in the company's value to $1,000,000,000. When, and if, good luck occurs, what two criticisms can you see of this incentive contract plan
Suppose you decide to elicit high effort by paying the bonus when the company's value falls to $500,000,000. When, and if, bad luck occurs, what two criticisms can you see of this incentive contract plan
Specific Electric Co. asks you to implement a pay-for-performance incentive contract for its new CEO and four EVPs on the Executive Committee. The five managers can either work really hard with 70 hour weeks at a personal opportunity cost of $200,000 in reduced personal entrepreneurship and increased stress-related health care costs or they can reduce effort, thereby avoiding the personal costs. The CEO and EVPs face three possible random outcomes: the probability of the company experiencing good luck is 30 percent, medium luck is 40 percent, and bad luck is 30 percent. Although the senior management team can distinguish the three "states" of luck as the quarter unfolds, the Compensation Committee of the Board of Directors (and the shareholders) cannot do so. Once the board designs an incentive contract, soon thereafter the good, medium, or bad luck occurs, and thereafter the senior managers decide to expend high or reduced work effort. One of the observable shareholder values listed below then results.

Assume the company has 10 million shares outstanding offered at a $65 initial share price, implying a $650,000,000 initial shareholder value. Since the EVPs and CEOs effort and the company's luck are unobservable to the owners and company directors, it is not possible when the company's share price falls to $50 and the company's value to $500,000,000 to distinguish whether the company experienced reduced effort and medium luck or high effort and bad luck. Similarly, it is not possible to distinguish reduced effort and good luck from high effort and medium luck.
Answer the following questions from the perspective of a member of the Compensation Committee of the board of directors who is aligned with shareholders' interests and is deciding on a performance-based pay plan (an "incentive contract") for the CEO and EVPs.
If the bonus compensation scheme must be announced in advance, and if you must pick one of the three choices in questions, which one would you pick and why In other words, under incomplete information, what is the optimal decision by the Board's Compensation Committee dedicated to act in the shareholders' interest
If you decide to pay 1 percent of this amount (in Question) as a cash bonus, what performance level (what share price or shareholder value) in the table should trigger the bonus Suppose you decide to elicit high effort by paying a bonus should the company's value rise to $800,000,000. What two criticisms can you see of this incentive contract plan
What is the maximum amount it would be worth to shareholders to elicit high effort all of the time rather than reduced effort all of the time
Suppose you decide to elicit high effort by paying a bonus only for an increase in the company's value to $1,000,000,000. When, and if, good luck occurs, what two criticisms can you see of this incentive contract plan
Suppose you decide to elicit high effort by paying the bonus when the company's value falls to $500,000,000. When, and if, bad luck occurs, what two criticisms can you see of this incentive contract plan
Explanation
This question doesn’t have an expert verified answer yet, let Examlex AI Copilot help.
Managerial Economics 13th Edition by James McGuigan,Charles Moyer,Frederick Harris
Why don’t you like this exercise?
Other Minimum 8 character and maximum 255 character
Character 255