Clawback enforcement heterogeneity and the horizon of executive pay: empirical evidence
International Journal of Accounting & Information Management
ISSN: 1834-7649
Article publication date: 1 August 2024
Issue publication date: 25 September 2024
Abstract
Purpose
Clawback provisions entitle shareholders to recover previously awarded incentive compensation after the discovery of accounting manipulation or misconduct. The author evaluates the impact of clawback enforcement heterogeneity on the horizon of executive compensation.
Design/methodology/approach
The author provides empirical tests to evaluate the impact of clawback adoption decisions. The author deals with the endogeneity of clawback adoption decisions through an instrumental variables strategy that exploits the transmission of governance choices within firms’ networks.
Findings
While the author finds that clawback adoption reduces the frequency of accounting manipulation, this reduction is accompanied by heterogeneous effects on the horizon of executive pay across firms. Clawback adopters with high director independence, high leverage, high managerial termination payments and low executive ownership tilt their compensation toward the short-term.
Practical implications
The results, robust to alternative specifications, suggest that clawbacks allow strong-enforcement firms to tilt compensation toward the short-term, offsetting some of the direct manipulation disincentives generated by the clawback. The stock market reacts positively to the adoption in firms with weak enforcement, suggesting that clawbacks significantly reduce the managers’ rent-extraction capacity.
Originality/value
Using a novel empirical and identification approach, the results suggest that clawbacks allow strong-enforcement firms to tilt compensation toward the short-term, offsetting some of the direct manipulation disincentives generated by the clawback.
Keywords
Citation
Remesal, A. (2024), "Clawback enforcement heterogeneity and the horizon of executive pay: empirical evidence", International Journal of Accounting & Information Management, Vol. 32 No. 5, pp. 773-802. https://doi.org/10.1108/IJAIM-04-2023-0099
Publisher
:Emerald Publishing Limited
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