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Agency, information and corporate investment

In: Handbook of the Economics of Finance

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Stein, Jeremy C.

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Abstract

This essay surveys the body of research that asks how the efficiency of corporate investment is influenced by problems of asymmetric information and agency. I organize the material around two basic questions. First, does the external capital market channel the right amount of money to each firm? That is, does the market get across-firm allocations right, so that the marginal return to investment in firm i is the same as the marginal return to investment in firm j? Second, do internal capital markets channel the right amount of money to individual projects within firms? That is, does the internal capital budgeting process get within-firm allocations right, so that the marginal return to investment in firm i's division A is the same as the marginal return to investment in firm i's division B? In addition to discussing the theoretical and empirical work that bears most directly on these questions, the essay also briefly sketches some of the implications of this work for broader issues in both macroeconomics and the theory of the firm.

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This chapter was published in: G.M. Constantinides & M. Harris & R. M. Stulz (ed.) Handbook of the Economics of Finance, , chapter 02, pages 111-165, 2003.

This item is provided by Elsevier in its series Handbook of the Economics of Finance with number 1-02.

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This chapter was published in the following book, which is listed on IDEAS:
G.M. Constantinides & M. Harris & R. M. Stulz (ed.), 2003. "Handbook of the Economics of Finance," Handbook of the Economics of Finance, Elsevier, edition 1, volume 1, number 1, September. [Downloadable!] (restricted)
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G3 - Financial Economics - - Corporate Finance and Governance

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