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Jonathan Glover

Jonathan Glover

· George O. May Professor of Financial Accounting in the Faculty of Business

Columbia University · Accounting

Active 1971–2024

h-index30
Citations5.4k
Papers21410 last 5y
Funding
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Research topics

  • Computer Science
  • Microeconomics
  • Business
  • Economics
  • Political Science
  • Finance
  • Computer Security
  • Knowledge management
  • Management
  • Law
  • Psychology
  • Social psychology
  • Accounting

Selected publications

  • Accounting conservatism and relational contracting

    Journal of Accounting and Economics · 2022 · 19 citations

    1st authorCorresponding
    • Computer Science
    • Political Science
    • Microeconomics
  • Optimal Team Composition: Diversity to Foster Implicit Team Incentives

    Management Science · 2021 · 33 citations

    1st authorCorresponding
    • Computer Science
    • Microeconomics
    • Business

    We study optimal team design. In our model, a principal assigns either heterogeneous agents to a team (a diverse team) or homogenous agents to a team (a specialized team) to perform repeated team production. We assume that specialized teams exhibit a productive substitutability (e.g., interchangeable efforts with decreasing returns to total effort), whereas diverse teams exhibit a productive complementarity (e.g., cross-functional teams). Diverse teams have an inherent advantage in fostering desirable implicit/relational incentives that team members can provide to each other (tacit cooperation). In contrast, specialization both complicates the provision of cooperative incentives by altering the punishment agents can impose on each other for short expected career horizons and fosters undesirable implicit incentives (tacit collusion) for long expected horizons. As a result, expected compensation is first decreasing and then increasing in the discount factor for specialized teams, while expected compensation is always decreasing in the discount factor for diverse teams. We use our results to develop empirical implications about the association between team tenure and team composition, pay-for-performance sensitivity, and team culture. This paper was accepted by Brian Bushee, accounting.

  • Team Incentives and Bonus Floors in Relational Contracts

    The Accounting Review · 2020 · 16 citations

    1st authorCorresponding
    • Computer Science
    • Computer Security
    • Computer Science

    ABSTRACT Teamwork and team incentives are increasingly prevalent in modern organizations. Performance measures used to evaluate individuals' contributions to teamwork are often non-verifiable. We study a principal-multi-agent model of relational (self-enforcing) contracts in which the optimal contract resembles a bonus pool. It specifies a minimum joint bonus floor the principal is required to pay out to the agents, and gives the principal discretion to use non-verifiable performance measures to both increase the size of the pool and to allocate the pool to the agents. The joint bonus floor is useful because of its role in motivating the agents to mutually monitor each other by facilitating a strategic complementarity in their payoffs. In an extension section, we introduce a verifiable team performance measure that is a noisy version of the individual non-verifiable measures, and show that the verifiable measure is either ignored or used to create a conditional bonus floor.

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