Differences in managerial discretion across countries: how nation‐level institutions affect the degree to which ceos matter
The University of Texas at Austin · Pennsylvania State University
Abstract
Abstract The concept of managerial discretion provides a theoretical fulcrum for resolving the debate about whether chief executive officers (CEOs) have much influence over company outcomes. In this paper, we operationalize and further develop the construct of managerial discretion at the national level. In an empirical examination of 15 countries, we find that certain informal and formal national institutions—individualism, tolerance of uncertainty, cultural looseness, dispersed firm ownership, a common‐law legal origin, and employer flexibility—are associated with the degree of managerial discretion available to CEOs of public firms in a country. In turn, we show that country‐level managerial discretion is…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 33.64
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 144
Authors
2Topics & keywords
- Discretion
- Operationalization
- Individualism
- Affect (linguistics)
- Flexibility (engineering)
- Construct (python library)
- Autonomy
- Business
- Peace, Justice and strong institutions