1 / 10

Comments on Nothing To Declare

Comments on Nothing To Declare. David Hoffman. Some things to declare. This is a remarkable research agenda which I’ve previously blogged about. I make a trivial amount of money from my blogging I will be using this research in my own future work

lave
Télécharger la présentation

Comments on Nothing To Declare

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Comments on Nothing To Declare David Hoffman

  2. Some things to declare • This is a remarkable research agenda which I’ve previously blogged about. • I make a trivial amount of money from my blogging • I will be using this research in my own future work • If I could figure out a way to monetize my research, I would

  3. Highlighted findings • When COI is immutable, disclosure of COI is perverse for both advisors and advisees. • When COI is mutable, disclosure is curative for advisees • Under some circumstances, voluntary disclosure is as curative as mandatory disclosures • Thus, when COIs are avoidable, disclosure isn’t perverse

  4. Some minor quibbles • Are there gender effects? Other demographic effects? • How was an 83% response rate to internet solicitation achieved? • These experiments have become somewhat well-known: any chance of contamination in the pool?

  5. Digging into immutable COIs • Paper puts subjects in the position of being able to avoid/not-avoid a COI. Subjects who selected out of COI were never in the position of conflict. • In life, COIs typically creep up on us – most of the time, we are conflicted at the decision-point. We can renounce the gains (indeed, law might compel it) but it’s harder to avoid the COI in the first instance. • And what does it mean, in reality, to have an unavoidable conflict? Almost all conflicts can be avoided given sufficient effort and expense. • Why not test the relationship between difficulty of exit and advice giving? • Put subjects in conflict position as a default and see what they do • Have them do two rounds of the experiment to see how they learn from the feeling of being in conflict

  6. (Perceived) Sophistication of Advisees • Paper finds that where voluntary disclosure will be noticed by advisees, there are few DV differences between mandatory and voluntary disclosures • Legal regimes might then possibly differ based on the sophistication of the audience. • But it’s only the perceived sophistication of the audience that matters. • Are there ways we can trick advisors into thinking advisees are more sophisticated than they are?

  7. Moral Licensing & the Law • Legal disclosure obligations typically fall on fiduciaries. Paper suggests – briefly – that fiduciary relationship could mediate the effect of both beneficent and perverse disclosure. • Next paper? Make advisors feel like fiduciaries • code of conduct • a story about good behavior • professional subjects • Contrasting intuitions: fiduciary conflicts are morally nondischargeable, but law permits disclosure to cure them • Would knowledge of fiduciary law (“abstain or disclose”) reinvigorate perverse effect?

  8. Agency and Disclosure What if the advisor’s COI benefits a third party? • Employees of a conflicted firm or working for a client or assigned benefits to unknown third party • Hypothesis: less likely to see an effect based on selecting into COI regime, since moral licensing effect is likely to disappear. • Mediated by how closely related the third-party is to the advisor

  9. Contracts and Disclosure What if the advisee’s relationship to the advisor is proximate? • Internal to contract relationship, parties often ask for new terms and must disclose COI. (Think Facebook.) Research Question: Is disclosure internal to contract relationship treated the same as disclosure during bargaining? Research Question: Would it matter if you are assigned to a contract which put you in a position of conflict?

More Related