1997
DOI: 10.1006/jjie.1997.0373
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Executive Salaries as Tournament Prizes and Executive Bonuses as Managerial Incentives in Japan

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Cited by 40 publications
(51 citation statements)
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“…The findings generally support Xu's (1997) findings. Our estimated pay gap elasticities are smaller, which is not terribly surprisingly given the dissimilarity of our samples (Xu's sample covers an earlier time period than ours and includes firms in the general machinery industries).…”
Section: Confronting Empirical Realities: the Determinants Of Performsupporting
confidence: 78%
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“…The findings generally support Xu's (1997) findings. Our estimated pay gap elasticities are smaller, which is not terribly surprisingly given the dissimilarity of our samples (Xu's sample covers an earlier time period than ours and includes firms in the general machinery industries).…”
Section: Confronting Empirical Realities: the Determinants Of Performsupporting
confidence: 78%
“…The most notable control is the probability of promotion or structure of the firm's hierarchy. In order to provide first period incentives, a low probability of promotion must be 'compensated' with an even larger prize (see Rosen, 1986;Xu 1997). The result that the prize increases in the number of equally able contestants can be readily seen from inspecting either equation (1) or equation (7).…”
Section: Confronting Empirical Realities: the Determinants Of Performmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…For an authoritative survey of earlier work, see Rosen (1990) who concludes his survey by urging scholars to broaden their inquiry beyond the U.S. to other countries. 2 See, for instance, Kaplan (1994), Xu (1997), Ang and Constand (1997), Joh (1999), Kubo (2001) and Kato and Kubo (2003). For studies using an alternative income tax return data set in Japan, see Kato and Rockel (1992) and Kato (1997).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For other countries, in particular Asian countries, data on CEO compensation are typically not publicly available and thus most studies use average pay for all executives. See, for instance, Kaplan (1994), Xu (1997), Ang and Constand (1997), Joh (1999) and Kubo (2001) on Japan; and Kato, Kim and Lee (2004) on Korea. The rare exception is Kato and Kubo (2005), which use proprietary data on Japanese CEO compensation.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%