SFB 303 Discussion Paper No. A - 608
Author: Kessler, Anke, and Christoph Lülfesmann
Title: Monitoring and Internal Efficiency:
A Comparison of Public and Private Ownership
Abstract: The paper compares the productive efficiency of public and
private enterprises in an adverse selection model with managerial
effort. Under either ownership structure, the firm's manager has
private information on his ability. The principal can invest in
monitoring to elicit this ability. As a benchmark, we show that the
manager's equilibrium effort in absence of monitoring is strictly
higher in a public firm where the principal is a benevolent
government. These results may be reversed when both principals have
access to a monitoring technology. We show that, under the optimal
monitoring and contracting decisions, the public principal may refrain
from audits, while the private principal monitors. In this case,
managerial effort and thus productive efficiency
can be higher in a private firm. Conversely, in situations where both
principals endogenously monitor, effort and welfare levels under
either governance structure coincide.
Keywords: Internal Efficiency, Montitoring, Governance Structures, Adverse > Selection
JEL-Classification-Number: D23, L23, L33
Creation-Date: December 1999
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