How Do Short-Term Incentives Affect Long-Term Productivity?
Heitor Almeida,
Nuri Ersahin,
Vyacheslav Fos,
Rustom M Irani and
Mathias Kronlund
The Review of Financial Studies, 2026, vol. 39, issue 1, 114-157
Abstract:
Previous research shows that incentives to meet short-term earnings targets can cause firms to increase share buybacks, leading to cuts in investments and employment. Using plant-level census data, we find that incentives to engage in earnings-per-share-motivated buybacks result in lower productivity at both the plant and firm level. We attribute this productivity drop to two mechanisms: reduced investment in productivity-augmenting technology, and inefficient allocation of resources across a firm’s plants. We identify multiple frictions—including labor unions, financial constraints, agency problems, and adjustment costs—that can constrain efficient reallocations across plants and thus exacerbate the consequences of firms’ short-term incentives.
Keywords: G32; G35; J23 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2026
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