More than two centuries ago, Adam Smith (1776) showed
skepticism about the efficiency of joint stock companies because of the
separation of management from ownership. He observed that managers of
joint stock companies cannot be expected to watch over the business with
the same anxious vigilance as owners in a partnership would. Adam
Smith’s worry remained buried for a century and a half until Berle and
Means (1932) rekindled interest in this area when they hypothesised in
their book that dispersed shareholding is an inefficient form of
ownership structure. They argued that separation of ownership and
management control has changed the role of owner from being active to
the passive agent. Dispersed shareholders lack incentives to monitor
self-interested managers who possess only a small fraction of the total
shareholdings. The propositions by Adam Smith (1776) and Berle and Means
(1932) received some support when Jensen and Meckling (1976) tied
together the elements of property rights, agency costs, and finance to
develop a theory of ownership structure of a firm. Jensen and Meckling
asserted that agency costs are real, which the owner can reduce either
by increasing ownership stake of the agent in the firm or by incurring
monitoring and bonding costs. In early tests, several research studies
supported the views of Jensen and Meckling. However, these studies did
not account for endogeneity problem.
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