When Words Speak Louder Without Actions

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Finance Papers
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communication
corporate governance
intervention
managerial leadership
Finance and Financial Management
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Levit, Doron
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This paper studies communication and intervention as mechanisms of corporate governance. I develop a model in which a privately informed principal can intervene in the decisions of the agent if the latter disobeys her instructions. The main result shows that intervention can prompt disobedience because it tempts the agent to challenge the principal to back her words with actions. This result provides a novel argument as to why a commitment not to intervene (and therefore, relying solely on communication) can be optimal. In this respect, words do speak louder without actions. The model is applied to managerial leadership, corporate boards, private equity, and shareholder activism.

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2017-02-14
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