Penalties, Manipulation, and Investment Efficiency
49 Pages Posted: 29 Sep 2017 Last revised: 21 Jul 2018
Date Written: June 15, 2018
Abstract
In this study we examine whether imposing a penalty based on an earlier positive signal and a bad realized outcome can be welfare-improving. We find that imposing a penalty helps to improve investment efficiency, but it also brings a deadweight cost of potential penalty for entrepreneurs with good projects. We show that when a good project has a much larger chance to achieve a good outcome than a bad project, or when a large proportion of the penalty can be reimbursed to the investor, it is optimal to impose a penalty to deter entrepreneurs with bad projects from reporting positive signals to the greatest degree, as the benefit from reducing the investment inefficiency outweighs the expected deadweight cost. Otherwise, it is optimal not to impose any penalty.
We also find that a larger penalty may induce more manipulation by a good entrepreneur. This is because, although a larger penalty directly discourages manipulation for both good and bad types by increasing the expected penalty cost, it also encourages upward manipulation by lowering the implicit financing cost upon a high signal. The encouraging effect is mostly pronounced for the good entrepreneur when he has a much larger chance of success than the bad entrepreneur, or when the reimbursement proportion is very high.
Keywords: penalty, manipulation, investment efficiency
JEL Classification: G18, G32, M41
Suggested Citation: Suggested Citation