中山管理評論  2002/12
第10卷英文特刊 p.115-134
Far East College , Institute of Human Resource Management, National Sun Yat-Sen University
This paper examines the moderating effects of product market competition on the relationship between a firm and its CEOs. The predictions of managerial talent hypothesis and risk-differential hypothesis were tested using a sample of publicly traded firms in the high-tech industry in Taiwan. The results indicate that product market competition negatively moderates the relationship between firm performance, R&D activity, investment diversity and the firm's CEO compensation. These results provide evidence for the risk-differential hypothesis, under which executives may consider risk more important than incentives when they are in a highly competitive product market.
(633498958120156250.pdf 27KB)product market competition, moderating effects, managerial talent hypothesis, risk-differential hypothesis, CEO compensation, high-tech industry