The Unintended Consequences of Headquarters’ Involvement in Decentralized Transfer Price Negotiations: Experimental Evidence

Markus Arnold, Florian Elsinger, Frederick W. Rankin
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Abstract

This study investigates how headquarters’ involvement affects the efficiency of transfer price negotiations. Although prior research explores autonomous transfer price negotiations, evidence suggests that headquarters can become involved in these negotiations, particularly after they fail. Although the likely intention of headquarters’ involvement is to overcome inefficiencies arising from decentralized managers’ inability to agree on a transfer price, we suggest that such involvement can reduce agreement frequency and the efficiency of transfer pricing in coordinating transfers between divisions. Reduced agreement may occur because involvement can reduce managers’ perceived responsibility for the negotiation outcome and because they may expect headquarters’ decision to be more favorable for them than a negotiated price. Headquarters’ involvement can also reduce the coordination efficiency of transfer pricing because of information asymmetries and headquarters’ decision biases in interpreting negotiation failure and using available information. In an experiment, we manipulate whether headquarters’ involvement is absent or present. We also manipulate whether headquarters suggests a nonbinding price (weak involvement) or whether it imposes a price on divisions (strong involvement). Consistent with our predictions, we find that headquarters’ involvement reduces the frequency of negotiation agreement and the coordination efficiency of transfer pricing. Efficiency is reduced more when involvement is strong rather than weak. We contribute to research by studying managers’ negotiation behavior in the realistic setting of potential headquarters’ involvement and by providing evidence on headquarters’ biased perceptions of negotiation impasse and the unintended consequences of its involvement. This paper was accepted by Brian Bushee, accounting.
总部参与分散式转让价格谈判的意外后果:实验证据
本研究探讨总部参与对转让价格谈判效率的影响。尽管先前的研究探讨了自主转让价格谈判,但有证据表明,总部可以参与这些谈判,特别是在谈判失败后。虽然总部参与的可能意图是克服由于分散管理人员无法就转让价格达成一致而产生的低效率,但我们认为,这种参与可能会降低部门之间协调转让时达成协议的频率和转让定价的效率。协议可能会减少,因为参与可以减少管理者对谈判结果的责任,因为他们可能期望总部的决定比谈判价格对他们更有利。由于信息不对称和总部在解释谈判失败和利用现有信息方面的决策偏差,总部的参与也会降低转移定价的协调效率。在一个实验中,我们操纵总部的参与是缺席还是在场。我们还操纵总部是否提出非约束性价格(弱参与)或是否对部门施加价格(强参与)。与我们的预测一致,我们发现总部的参与降低了谈判协议的频率和转移定价的协调效率。当参与程度高而不是低时,效率会更低。我们通过研究管理者在潜在总部参与的现实背景下的谈判行为,并提供证据证明总部对谈判僵局的偏见看法及其参与的意外后果,从而为研究做出贡献。这篇论文被会计Brian Bushee接受。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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