Adverse Selection, Diversion of Resources and Conservatism

2020 
We consider an investor’s choice of conservative reporting, bonus payments, and investment decisions in the presence of the hidden-information agency problem of a manager’s productivity and the hidden-action agency problem of a manager’s diversion of resources. It is important to consider the hidden-action and hidden-information agency problems in isolation and their interaction, to gain insights into the drivers of demand for conservatism. We show that the conservative (non-conservative) regime is optimal for the high-productivity (low-productivity) manager when both agency problems exist; even though the non-conservative regime is optimal for both the high- and low-productivity managers when only the hidden-action or the hidden-information problem exists. Essentially, the low-productivity manager can misrepresent as the high-productivity manager to obtain high investment levels and divert resources only in the presence of both agency problems. This added layer of agency problem creates the demand for conservatism and highlights the importance of the interaction between the hidden-action and hidden-information agency problems. Furthermore, we show that as the conservatism level increases: (a) the optimal investment level conditional on a good report for the high-productivity manager increases and approaches the first-best level, i.e., ex-post investment efficiency increases; (b) the expected optimal investment level for the high-productivity manager decreases and diverges from the expected first-best level, i.e., ex-ante investment efficiency decreases; and (c) the expected bonus payment to the high- and low-productivity managers decreases. These findings provide insights into how the demand for conservatism arises in the presence of both hidden-information and hidden-action agency problems and provide empirical guidance relating conservatism to investment efficiency.
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