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Keywords
CEO Compensation; Family Firms; Emerging Markets; Business Groups; Pay-performance Sensitivity;
Working Paper
Research summary: Using a principal-principal agency theory lens we examine corporate governance and compensation design in family-owned businesses. The authors conceptualize how CEO pay and pay-performance sensitivity is influenced by whether the CEO is a professional or drawn from the controlling family (family CEO). Data from a sample of 277 publicly listed Indian family firms during 2004-2013 support our argument that family CEOs get paid more than professional CEOs. This pattern is stronger in superior-performing firms that are named after the controlling family (eponymous firms). Furthermore, family CEOs of superior-performing firms have higher pay-performance sensitivity compared to professional CEOs of other superior-performing firms. These findings reveal nuanced heterogeneity in nepotism in emerging economy family firms – CEO compensation is a mechanism for some controlling families to tunnel corporate resources.