Title: Business%20Ownership%20and%20Control
1Business Ownership and Control
- Stakeholders and objectives
- Principle agent problem
2Stakeholders and aims
- Stakeholders are groups who have an interest in
the activity and performance outcomes of a
business - Shareholders
- Managers
- Employees
- Suppliers
- Customers
- Government and local communities.
3Stakeholders and aims
- Different stakeholders tend to have different
objectives e.g.. owners want maximum profits,
customers lower prices and workers higher wages. - Stakeholder conflict can ensue. Eg in public
limited companies, ownership and control are
separate owners seek maximum profits managers
may seek sales maximisation as these increase
their bonuses.
4Divorce between Ownership Control
- The majority of shareholders in a quoted company
(plc) cannot exercise day-to-day control over the
decisions of managers - Managers employed by a business may have
different motivations than owners - Managers may want to maximise their own utility
from being in charge of a business - This may lead to decisions that are not
consistent with profit maximisation / or
maximising shareholder value over time
5Ownership and control
Principals Shareholders
Control Mechanisms Pressures from the stock
market Regular meetings with shareholders
(AGM) Performance related pay (to provide
incentives)
Agents Board of Directors Senior Management
6Ownership, control influence
Principals Shareholders
Control Mechanisms Pressures from the stock
market Regular meetings with shareholders
(AGM) Performance related pay
Agents Board of Directors Senior Management
Other influences on business behaviour Consumers
e.g. ethical retailing Industry
regulators Government (taxation, trade policy etc)
7Behavioural Theorists Managerial Discretion
Models
- Behavioural economists examine the decisions that
are taken within complex business organisations - Stakeholders are those with a vested interest in
a business - Employees
- Managers
- Shareholders (owners)
- Customers
8Behavioural Theorists Managerial Discretion
Models
- Managers often have discretionary powers in
deciding on price and output and marketing in
different segments of markets - Much depends on the degree of autonomy (freedom)
that the head office of a business gives to its
managers e.g. people employed in individual sales
outlets - Maximising behaviour may be replaced by
satisficing I.e. setting minimum acceptable
levels of achievement
9Herbert Simon - The Satisficing Principle
- Satisficing Satisfy Suffice
- No business can process all the factors affecting
the marketing/pricing of a product, in the hope
of maximising profit - This theory is known as bounded rationality
- The complexity of decision-making may lead to
managers following rules of thumb rather than
seek optimal decisions all of the time
10Herbert Simon - The Satisficing Principle
- Agents (e.g. managers) face information costs in
the present and uncertainty about the future - This limits their decision-making ability and may
force them to make decisions by seeking the first
satisfactory solution rather than optimizing
11The Principle Agent Problem
- The principal, hires an agent to perform tasks on
his behalf but cannot ensure that the agent
performs them in exactly the way the principal
would like. - The efforts of the agent are expensive and
time-consuming to monitor - Incentives of the agent may differ from those of
the principal leading to a conflict of objectives - It is linked to the problem of asymmetric
information - Unequal information share between two parties
- It does not arise if a legal contract can be
drawn up to specify all the duties of the agent
12Coping with the Principle Agent Problem
- It boils down to having the right incentives!
- Share-ownership schemes
- Performance-related pay
- (a) Incentive pay schemes e.g. profit sharing
- (b) Wages related directly to productivity /
profitability - Long-term employment contracts for senior
management to give them a higher degree of
loyalty to the business - Generous non-financial rewards but based on /
contingent on assessments of performance - Regular performance reviews
- Increasing role played by activist hedge funds