认真对待合规

J. Armour, Jeffrey N. Gordon, Geeyoung Min
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引用次数: 26

摘要

我们如何确保企业遵守“游戏规则”——即鼓励企业避免有害社会行为的法律?企业合规项目在当前社会应对中发挥着核心作用。检察官通过对罚款的折扣来激励公司实施指导和监督员工行为的合规项目。然而,关注公司的激励忽视了管理者的观点,他们决定了公司在合规方面的投资。我们的研究表明,企业高管普遍采用的基于股票的薪酬,形成了减少合规的系统性激励。对公司来说,合规是一项长期投资,而经理人的时间范围被缩短到他们预计清算股票的日期。此外,投资者发现很难评估合规项目的价值,因为公司通常很少或根本不披露其合规活动。我们发现,股票薪酬经理不愿意披露合规,因为这样的披露可能会暴露有关公司不当行为倾向的私人信息。因此,无论是管理者还是市场,都可能在合规问题上目光短浅。为了社会和股东的利益,如何解决这个问题?董事会应该作为监督者来控制管理代理成本。我们表明,董事越来越多地使用基于股票的薪酬,作为鼓励对商业决策进行更有力监督的一种手段,也对董事会监督合规的激励产生了腐蚀作用。理论上,董事们要为合规监管的失败承担责任,但前提是他们的行为严重到构成恶意。我们认为,这一责任标准是在对经理和董事普遍发放股票薪酬之前建立起来的,如今已变得过于宽松。我们建议让董事对合规失败承担更强硬的责任,在数量上限制为按比例收回基于股票的薪酬。这将增加董事利益与股东利益一致的权力——在合规失败的情况下,董事损失的不仅仅是股票价值的下降——但以这种方式限制责任将避免推动董事会在合规方面过度投资。我们概述了通过股东提案或司法创新来实施这一提议的方式。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Taking Compliance Seriously
How can we ensure corporations play by the “rules of the game”—that is, laws encouraging firms to avoid socially harmful conduct? Corporate compliance programs play a central role in society’s current response. Prosecutors give firms incentives—through discounts to penalties—to implement compliance programs that guide and monitor employees’ behavior. However, focusing on the incentives of firms overlooks the perspective of managers, who decide how much firms invest in compliance. We show that stock-based pay, ubiquitous for corporate executives, creates systematic incentives to short-change compliance. Compliance is a long-term investment for firms, whereas managers’ time horizon is truncated to the date they expect to liquidate stock. Moreover, investors find it hard to value compliance programs because firms routinely disclose little or nothing about their compliance activities. We show that stock-compensated managers prefer not to disclose compliance because such disclosure can reveal private information about a firm’s propensity to misconduct. As a result, both managers and markets are likely myopic about compliance. How can this problem be resolved for the benefit of society and shareholders? Boards of directors are supposed to act as monitors to control managerial agency costs. We show that the increasing use of stock-based compensation for directors, justified as a means of encouraging more vigorous oversight of business decisions, also has a corrosive effect on boards’ monitoring incentives for compliance. Directors in theory face liability for compliance oversight failures, but only if so egregious as to amount to bad faith. We argue that this standard of liability, established in an era before ubiquitous stock-based compensation for both managers and directors, has now become too lax. We propose more assertive directors’ liability for compliance failures, limited in quantum to a proportionate clawback of stock-based pay. This would add power to the alignment of directors’ interests with those of shareholders— directors would stand to lose more than just a decrease in the value of their stock in the event of a compliance failure—but limiting liability in this way would avoid pushing boards to overinvest in compliance. We outline ways in which this proposal could be implemented either by shareholder proposals or judicial innovation.
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