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Pyramidal organizational structures are common throughout the world. This article considers an explanation for pyramids built by the state: separating firms from political interference. Although intermediate pyramidal layers insulate managers from a pyramid’s top owners and hence induce agency costs, they also minimize political costs of state intervention. All else equal, the optimal division of power between the government and the managers should be the point at which the marginal agency costs are equal to the marginal political costs. Our empirical results, based on hand-collected data for 742 local government-owned Chinese business groups are generally in line with this hypothesis. (JEL: D21, D23, G32, L22, L32, P31).
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Joseph P. H. Fan
The University of Queensland
T.J. Wong
University of Southern California
T. Zhang
Northwest University
The Journal of Law Economics and Organization
Chinese University of Hong Kong
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Fan et al. (Thu,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69debe27499d77a496b0cb5a — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1093/jleo/ews028