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Explaining corporate short-termism: self-reinforcing processes and biases among investors, the media and corporate managers

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Article

Aspara, Jaakko ; Pajunen, Kalle ; Tikkanen, Henrikki ; Tainio, Risto

Socio-Economic Review

2014

12

4

Oct.

667-693

business economics ; business strategy ; financial management ; investment

Business economics

http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ser/mwu019

English

Bibliogr.

"Based on the related literature in economics, organizational sociology and the sociology of finance, this article constructs a novel conceptual explanation for corporate short-termism, that is, the tendency of corporate managers to sacrifice long-term investments to improve short-term earnings (STEs). We theorize about how such corporate short-termism emerges, at least partly, from systemic, self-reinforcing processes across various communities of actors including investors, the media and managers themselves. In doing so, we refute the common notion that corporate short-termism is caused by an inherent preference of investors or other actors to focus on STEs. Consequently, the systemic perspective offered by this article questions some conventional assumptions about the roots of corporate short-termism and emphasizes the influence of coordination mechanisms and behavioural biases in giving rise to self-reinforcing loops."

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