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NSC Outstanding Scholar Series. Taiwan March 2005. Top-down Approach. Start with economic institutionsFind key constraints that affect firm structures (ownership, organization, management and governance)Understand the incentives structuresExamine the effects on accounting and auditing. NSC Outs
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1. NSC Outstanding Scholar Series Taiwan March 2005 Economic Institutions, Governance and Accounting Professor T.J. Wong
The Chinese University of HK
2. NSC Outstanding Scholar Series Taiwan March 2005 Top-down Approach Start with economic institutions
Find key constraints that affect firm structures (ownership, organization, management and governance)
Understand the incentives structures
Examine the effects on accounting and auditing
3. NSC Outstanding Scholar Series Taiwan March 2005 Developing a Framework Three Steps Descriptive research
Fundamental research
Build a framework
4. NSC Outstanding Scholar Series Taiwan March 2005 Current Development of Asian Research Bottom-up approach has no future!
Two common examples of that:
Replicate U.S. research
Document a phenomenon but cannot provide good explanations or the explanation is too simple (no academic value)
5. NSC Outstanding Scholar Series Taiwan March 2005 1. Descriptive Research START w/ DATA
Understand institutional background
Construct a good data sample: data are very hard to get, but they are available
Measurement and classification work
e.g. Identify ownership types and organization structures
Finding some patterns in a chaotic environment
6. NSC Outstanding Scholar Series Taiwan March 2005 2. Fundamental Research To study stakeholder incentives and conflicts among them, we need to first answer some fundamental questions for listed family- or government-owned firms:
Ownership and organization structure and incentives
What are the property rights allocations among stakeholders?
Identify their incentives and conflicts
Role of economic institutions, e.g. governments, in ownership and control of firms
7. NSC Outstanding Scholar Series Taiwan March 2005 3. Development of Theoretical Framework Based on theories from economics and finance
Transition economics
Property rights and transaction cost literature
Organization theories e.g. agency framework
Use them to guide empirical work that helps develop some descriptive theories
8. NSC Outstanding Scholar Series Taiwan March 2005 Rough Sketch of the Framework
9. NSC Outstanding Scholar Series Taiwan March 2005 Institutional Setting Political economy
Govt ownership - SOE
Transition economy - lack of markets
Govt and private business - rent seeking
Law
Legal systems and enforcements
Culture and social norm
Trust
Relationship-based dealings
10. NSC Outstanding Scholar Series Taiwan March 2005 How to Go about it? Acquiring the right tools:
Organization economics: property rights and transaction cost
Ownership and organization costs
Government
Accounting and agency costs
11. NSC Outstanding Scholar Series Taiwan March 2005 First Step Learn from positive accounting theory
Based on organization economics
New development in the ownership literature: separation of ownership and control and agency conflict between owners and managers
Also based on economics of government regulation research
Developing a framework to describe firms accounting choices
12. NSC Outstanding Scholar Series Taiwan March 2005 Organization Economics Overview
Which productive markets are carried out by markets and which by firms?
Formation of firms is an optimal choice (Coase, 1937)
Tradeoff between co-ordination and transaction costs
How are firms organized optimally to minimize organizational costs?
Co-ordination cost
Monitoring costs (Alchian and Demsetz, 1972)
Monitoring incentives (Karpoff and Rice, 1989)
Organization structure (Jensen and Meckling, 1991)
13. NSC Outstanding Scholar Series Taiwan March 2005 The Theory of the Firm I. Underlying ideas
Substitution at the margin
Formation of firm is not just government fiat, but optimal choice of economic agents (footnote 3, p.398)
II. What is the difference between economic planning and price mechanism?
14. NSC Outstanding Scholar Series Taiwan March 2005 Theory of the Firm III. What is the major difference between co-ordination by entrepreneur vs. co-ordination by price mechanisms?
Co-ordination determined by changes factor market prices, not entrepreneurs order
15. NSC Outstanding Scholar Series Taiwan March 2005 Theory of the Firm IV. What is marketing cost?
Most obvious one is the cost of discovering what the relevant prices are
The cost of carrying out a transaction by means of an exchange on the open market
Search and information costs, bargaining and decision costs, policing and enforcement costs
16. NSC Outstanding Scholar Series Taiwan March 2005 Theory of the Firm V. How do the contractual arrangements change when theres a firm?
Several contracts substituted by one
Factor agrees to obey entrepreneur within certain limits
IV. How do long-term contracts give rise to the formation of firms?
17. NSC Outstanding Scholar Series Taiwan March 2005 Theory of the Firm VI. Main argument in the paper
Firms will emerge to organize what would otherwise be market transactions whenever their costs are < costs of carrying out the transactions thru the market
VII. What is the market?
An institution that exists to facilitate exchange, in order to reduce the cost of carrying out exchange transactions
18. NSC Outstanding Scholar Series Taiwan March 2005 Theory of the Firm VIII. Role of law and regulations
Reduce transaction costs, not necessarily an attempt to create monopoly rights that aim to reduce competition
19. NSC Outstanding Scholar Series Taiwan March 2005 Production, Information Costs, and Economic Organizationby Alchian and Demsetz (1972) The essence of organization
It is in a team use of inputs and a centralized position of some party in the contractual arrangements of all other inputs
The essence of the classical firm is identified as a contractual structure with:
1. Joint input production
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24. NSC Outstanding Scholar Series Taiwan March 2005 Corporate Management and Property RightsA.Alchian Coase talks about why there is modern firm
Alchian and Demsetz analyze how the metering (monitoring) problem shapes the organization structure of a firm
This paper focuses on a unique feature in modern firm separation of ownership and control affects monitoring problem
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30. NSC Outstanding Scholar Series Taiwan March 2005 Specific and General Knowledge, and Organization StructureJensen and Meckling, 1991 In Alchian (previous paper), we examine how ownership (separation of ownership and control) affects organization cost - monitoring cost
Here, we examine how knowledge affects organization of firms
Allocation of decision rights
Centralization vs. decentralization within an organization
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35. NSC Outstanding Scholar Series Taiwan March 2005 2. Ownership and Agency Cost
36. NSC Outstanding Scholar Series Taiwan March 2005 Theory of the Firm: Managerial Behavior, Agency Costs and Ownership Structure Jensen and Meckling Background
Theory of the firm: a black box
Before, the firm operated so as to meet the relevant marginal conditions (mc=mr), thereby maximizing profits
No theory explains how the conflicting objectives of the individuals are brought into equilibrium to yield the results
JM adopts utility max behavior approach to examine how these conflicting incentives shape the equilibrium
37. NSC Outstanding Scholar Series Taiwan March 2005 Background - continued Property rights
A very broad term, it includes the rights to the profits generated by the property, the decision rights of the usage of the property, and the rights to transfer the property rights to others
For example: a shareholder has cash flow rights, control (voting rights), rights to sell the share
This paper studies how contracts are used to allocate property rights among the participants of an organization
38. NSC Outstanding Scholar Series Taiwan March 2005 Background continued Agency cost
Complement property rights literature (study the contractual relationship between principal and agent)
Definition of agency costs: a. monitoring expenditures by the principal, b. bonding expenditure by the agent, c. residual loss
Similar to shirking and monitoring of team production in Alchian and Demsetz, 1972
Focus is not normative: how to structure contracts to maximize principals welfare.
Rather, positive: how principal and agents set the contractual relationship by maximizing their respective welfare
39. NSC Outstanding Scholar Series Taiwan March 2005 Background - continued Other issues:
Coase (1937): tradeoff between cost of using markets vs. cost of direct authority
Alchian and Demsetz (1972): emphasize contractual relationships within a firm (not direct authority); monitoring problem of joint inputs in production process
This paper, broader view: firm is a nexus of contracts
40. NSC Outstanding Scholar Series Taiwan March 2005 Agency Cost of Outside Equity Jensen and Meckling (1976) call the contract between shareholders of a firm and owner-manager an agency relationship
Owner-manager enjoys money and perks (company cars and business trips)
JM analyze how owner-managers consumption of perks differs before and after the sale of shares to outsiders
41. NSC Outstanding Scholar Series Taiwan March 2005 Owner-manager with no outside shareholders Perk consumption lowers value of the firm
Owner-manager needs to make optimally 3 business trips for a project with net present value of V
If owner-manager enjoys business trips and thus makes 4 trips, then the net present value of the project will be V* < V (because business trip is costly
Cost of the perk consumption is F* = V - V*
42. NSC Outstanding Scholar Series Taiwan March 2005 Owner-manager with outside shareholders If a fraction of non-voting shares, (1-a) where 0 < a < 1, are sold to outsiders, owner-manager will consume more perks (F > F*). Why?
Cost of $1 perk consumption drops to $a, outside shareholder shares $(1-a).
Firm value drops to V = V - F < V*.
Outside shareholder pays (1-a)V for the firm. Why not (1-a)V*?
43. NSC Outstanding Scholar Series Taiwan March 2005 Owner-manager with outside shareholders (contd) Rational expectation of investors in market as it is under Efficient Market Hypothesis
Outside shareholders are price protected
They expect the increase in consumption of perks to F and reduction in share value to V.
Owner-managers reduction in wealth V* - V is the agency cost
44. NSC Outstanding Scholar Series Taiwan March 2005 Contracts for monitoring To the owner-manager, the agency cost of the additional perk consumption after sale of shares to outsiders is V*-V.
However, the benefit of consuming it may be K, K < V*-V.
If the owner-manager can contract for monitoring (hire an auditor) at a cost of M, he will do so if V*-V > K+M.
45. NSC Outstanding Scholar Series Taiwan March 2005 Contracting role of accounting Accounting numbers are used in contracts (debt contracts, management compensation contracts, government rules)
External auditor as monitors
Financial analysts as monitors
Stewardship vs. information role of accounting
46. NSC Outstanding Scholar Series Taiwan March 2005 Separation of Ownership and Control Fama and Jensen Theme:
To explain of the survival of organizations characterized by separation of ownership and control, absent of fiat.
In such organization, important decision agent do not bear a substantial share of the wealth effects of their decisions
47. NSC Outstanding Scholar Series Taiwan March 2005 Key contractual arrangements in firms The contract that specifies the nature of residual claims and
The contract that allocates the steps of the decision process among agents
These 2 contracts distinguish organizations from one another and explain why specific organizational forms survives
48. NSC Outstanding Scholar Series Taiwan March 2005 Residual claims Residual claimants or residual risk bearers contract for the rights to net cash flows. The residual risk here is the risk of the difference stochastic inflows of resources and promised payments to agents
Having uncertainly borne by ONE group has survival value by reducing monitoring cost
Contracts that direct decisions toward the interests of residual claimants add survival value lower production allows products to be more competitive
49. NSC Outstanding Scholar Series Taiwan March 2005 Residual claims - continued Residual claims may contain restrictions e.g. state share cannot be traded
Least restriction is common stock of a large US corporation (e.g. of an open corporation)
Shareholders not required to have any role
Residual claims are alienable without restriction
This allows unrestricted risk sharing
Closed corporation have residual claims largely restricted to internal decision agents limited risk sharing
50. NSC Outstanding Scholar Series Taiwan March 2005 The decision process The process has four steps
Initiation generation of proposals for resource utilization and structuring of contracts
Ratification choice of the decision initiatives to be implemented
Implementation execution of ratified decisions
Monitoring measurement of the performance of decision agents and implementation of rewards
1 & 3 are decision management and 2 & 4 are decision control
51. NSC Outstanding Scholar Series Taiwan March 2005 Relations between risk-bearing and decision process Define some contractual arrangements
Separation of residual risk bearing from decision management leads to decision systems that separate decision management from decision control
Combination of decision management and decision control in a few agents lead to residual claims that are largely restricted to these agents
52. NSC Outstanding Scholar Series Taiwan March 2005 Relations between risk-bearing and decision process - continued An interesting question what determines these two different types of contractual arrangements
Decision management, decision control and residual risk bearing:
Combination
Separation
53. NSC Outstanding Scholar Series Taiwan March 2005 Combination More optimal for small noncomplex organization where specific information relevant to mgmt and control is concentrated in one or a few agents
Combining mgmt and controls increases agency cost, thus restrict residual claimants to be decision agents
This restriction limits the benefits of unrestricted risk sharing firms become too risk adverse
These problems less serious in small noncomplex organization
54. NSC Outstanding Scholar Series Taiwan March 2005 Separation In complex organizations, specific knowledge relevant to decision management and decision control is diffused among agents, leading to separation of management and control
Residual claims are also diffused allowing unrestricted risk sharing, satisfy their demand for capital
Separation increases agency cost but allows valuable knowledge to be used at the point of the decision process, reducing agency cost
55. NSC Outstanding Scholar Series Taiwan March 2005 The Structure of Corporate Ownership: Causes and Consequences Demsetz and Lehn Motivations
Separation of ownership and control increases shirking, lower efficiency
There exist advantages of diffuse ownership that counterbalance such externalities
Firms that vary ownership concentration is guided by this tradeoff, guided by the goal of value maximization
56. NSC Outstanding Scholar Series Taiwan March 2005 Main theme Two questions
What determine ownership structure? Understanding what makes these advantages of diffuse ownership vary in strength from firm to firm
Does ownership concentration matter (after controlling for other determinants of profits)
57. NSC Outstanding Scholar Series Taiwan March 2005 Four proposed determinants of ownership concentration Size
Control potential
Regulation
Amenity potential
58. NSC Outstanding Scholar Series Taiwan March 2005 Consequence of diffuse ownership structures
Demsetz (1983) predicts no relation. The ownership structure is optimally decided to maximize profits.
59. NSC Outstanding Scholar Series Taiwan March 2005 Management Ownership and Market Valuation: An Empirical Analysis - Morck, Shleifer and Vishny 2 hypotheses:
Entrenchment hypothesis increase ownership can free mgmt from checks on his control. Control of board and free from takeover threat
Convergence-of-interest hypothesis interests of mgmt and outsider investors are aligned, less agency problem
60. NSC Outstanding Scholar Series Taiwan March 2005 Government
61. NSC Outstanding Scholar Series Taiwan March 2005 Outline The theory of economic regulation
Political process and wealth transfer
Political process and accounting
3 models of government
Politician incentives and firm behavior
62. NSC Outstanding Scholar Series Taiwan March 2005 The Theory of Economic RegulationGeorge Stigler Main point: to explain who will receive the benefits or burdens of regulation, what form regulation will take, and its effects on resource allocation
Regulation is acquired by the industry and is designed for primarily for its benefits
63. NSC Outstanding Scholar Series Taiwan March 2005 Two views of political process Economic/rational view: regulation is instituted primarily for the protection and benefit of the public at large or some large subclass of the public
Irrational view: politics are not predictable and cannot be rationalized
64. NSC Outstanding Scholar Series Taiwan March 2005 What benefits can state provide for industry? Direct subsidies
Control over entries of rivals
Policies that hurt substitutes but promote compliments. e.g. airlines lobby against railway but support govt subsidies to airports
Price fixing/control
65. NSC Outstanding Scholar Series Taiwan March 2005 Cost of political process - acquiring regulation Democratic political decision process differ from market process
Decisions must be made simultaneously be a large number of persons
Decisions must involve all the community
Information cost is high compared to market decision - information must be sought on many issues with little or no direct concern to individuals
66. NSC Outstanding Scholar Series Taiwan March 2005 Political process The process is a competition among individuals for wealth transfer
Political lobbying e.g. Farmers lobby for import quotas, unions lobby for minimum wages
Equilibrium result of 2 opposing forces - those providing the benefit and those receiving the benefit
67. NSC Outstanding Scholar Series Taiwan March 2005 Other costs High information cost and the small benefit in obtaining the information leads to the formation of political party or special interest groups
Heterogeneity of interests limit the size of the group
Too large a group increases organization costs
68. NSC Outstanding Scholar Series Taiwan March 2005 Political processs effect on accounting procedure Asymmetric loss function -- conservatism in accounting (explain)
It is a result of information costs, why?
Manage earnings to avoid large windfall profits during the oil crisis
Companies in regulated industries used purchase method instead of pooling to increase asset base, so as to increase revenue (fee based on asset base x fixed rate)
69. NSC Outstanding Scholar Series Taiwan March 2005 Grabbing HandShleifer and Vishny 3 models
Helping hand assumes government is welfare maximizing; govt intervention is response to market failures
Invisible hand; govt intervention bad for economy; build market institutions
Grabbing hand model; govt is v. self-interested NOT welfare maximizing; focuses on politics that drive government behavior
70. NSC Outstanding Scholar Series Taiwan March 2005 Helping hand In dealing with a banking crisis - a state bank going bankrupt
See advantages of state ownership to address market failures e.g. loan to regionally important projects
Bad firms are results of bad governance due to market failures
71. NSC Outstanding Scholar Series Taiwan March 2005 Grabbing hand Not a corporate governance issue
Rather a public governance issue
Politicians pursue political goals, not economic goals in the bank
Privatize the bank and limit the influence of politicians
72. NSC Outstanding Scholar Series Taiwan March 2005 Positive Accounting Theory Phd Seminar
Professor TJ Wong
2004
73. NSC Outstanding Scholar Series Taiwan March 2005 Background Study of accounting choice, can be broad
Level of disclosure
Quality of information reported
Accounting methods used
Accruals
Role of accounting information in an organization
Role of auditors, type of auditors hired
74. NSC Outstanding Scholar Series Taiwan March 2005 Positive vs. Normative Positive
Descriptive
Based on theory with objective goal
Refutable
Emphasize constraints in market, organizational & human behavior Negative
Prescriptive
A matter of subjective value
Not refutable
75. NSC Outstanding Scholar Series Taiwan March 2005 Evolution Information perspective: info usefulness, relationship between accounting information and stock price (Ball and Brown, 1968)
In finance theory underlying the empirical tests of these financial accounting research info is costless and no transaction cost
Accounting choice is irrelevant
76. NSC Outstanding Scholar Series Taiwan March 2005 Accounting choice matters It matters when we introduce information and transaction costs
Development of the literature
Production activity can occur via marketplace or within a firm (Coase)
Within a firm, there are organization /contracting costs (Alchian and Demsetz)
Agency costs associated with debt and equity (Jensen and Meckling)
Firms organize themselves to minimize contracting costs (Fama and Jensen; Demsetz and Lehn)
77. NSC Outstanding Scholar Series Taiwan March 2005 Accounting choice matters Development of the literature
Firms choose a optimal portfolio of accounting method to minimize organization cost and maximize chances of survival
There are costs of contracting in the political process (Stigler, 1971). For example, lobbying cost. The extent of wealth transfers created by the political process are affected by these contracting costs
78. NSC Outstanding Scholar Series Taiwan March 2005 Economic Institutions and Accounting Name some sample research based on US data.
Non-US studies:
Institutions --> organization --> quality of accounting
Cross-country looking at legal system; ownership and corporate structures using Asian data; ownership and corporate structures using China data: private vs. government
Quality of earnings can include ERC, cash vs. accruals, related party transactions
2. Roles of auditors and analysts
3. Know more about organization structures and role of accounting
4. Government influences and corporate transparency and choice of auditors
Name some sample research based on US data.
Non-US studies:
Institutions --> organization --> quality of accounting
Cross-country looking at legal system; ownership and corporate structures using Asian data; ownership and corporate structures using China data: private vs. government
Quality of earnings can include ERC, cash vs. accruals, related party transactions
2. Roles of auditors and analysts
3. Know more about organization structures and role of accounting
4. Government influences and corporate transparency and choice of auditors
79. NSC Outstanding Scholar Series Taiwan March 2005 Corporate Financial Statements, A Product of the Market and Political Process Watts and Zimmerman Background
Use the agency theory to examine the role of audited financial statements in reducing agency cost
How can accounting information reduce agency cost?
80. NSC Outstanding Scholar Series Taiwan March 2005 Whats new? The idea that agency relationship can explain accounting practice is not new the stewardship concept in the accounting literature
Whats new: formally linking firms incentives to reduce agency cost and how they contract to supply monitoring info in FS
This framework helps generate consistent, interrelated hypotheses about accounting practices
Can we learn from them?
81. NSC Outstanding Scholar Series Taiwan March 2005 Research design Use voluntary FS reporting in the 19th century for testing hypotheses of the unregulated market
See how contracting costs affect the level of FS reporting in regulated and unregulated market
82. NSC Outstanding Scholar Series Taiwan March 2005 Role of FS in unregulated economy H1: More bonding covenants, greater likelihood for presentation of FS
Possible endogeneity problem
H2: Smaller managerial ownership, more FS
H3: More outside risky debt, more FS
H4: Compensation contracts use profits after renewals, repairs, maintenance or depreciation
83. NSC Outstanding Scholar Series Taiwan March 2005 Role of FS in regulated economy In regulated economy, managers still have incentives to reduce agency cost
There exists an income-increasing standard, profits increased by some non-cash accruals
H5: Loan agreements made after the new standard would exclude the accruals from the profit
84. NSC Outstanding Scholar Series Taiwan March 2005 Information perspective cannot explain accounting practices in unregulated economies FS convey relatively little info which causes the capital market to change the values of share prices
Investors have incentives for private info gathering. Managers cannot hold back leakage of info until publication of FS. They can profit from supplying value-relevant info, whereas they will be rewarded for supply relevant info for contracting purposes, e.g. lower cost of capital
85. NSC Outstanding Scholar Series Taiwan March 2005 Political process and FS Understanding bureaucrats incentives
Voters dont pay attention to political process but focus on crises
Bureaucrats try to avoid future crises
Tend to overreact to past crises (e.g. 1929 crash)
Losses due to actions are more apparent than losses due to inactions
Bias towards undervaluation of assets
86. NSC Outstanding Scholar Series Taiwan March 2005 Political process and FS Understanding bureaucrats incentives
H6: the assets are more undervalued in economy in which disclosure regulations set by bureaucrats than unregulated economy
Overreact to crises lead to the following H7: the larger the size of a corporation whose net income is increased (decreased) by a proposal accounting standard, the greater the likelihood that its managers will lobby against (for) the standard