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THE VIABLE EVA CENTER (OR, HOW TO SLICE A COMPANY SO IT DOESN'T BLEED)
Author(s) -
Hodak Marc
Publication year - 2000
Publication title -
journal of applied corporate finance
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1745-6622
pISSN - 1078-1196
DOI - 10.1111/j.1745-6622.2000.tb00067.x
Subject(s) - delegation , accountability , business , division (mathematics) , transfer pricing , accounting , economics , industrial organization , marketing , management , finance , law , political science , arithmetic , mathematics , multinational corporation
How a company is sliced, or broken up into divisions of various sorts, has a huge effect on the accountability and hence the behavior of its managers. Senior management faces a tradeoff between delegating authority to subordinates who have the best information for specific decisions, and maintaining authority to avoid parochial behavior that might hurt the organization as a whole. Divisions exist within companies to provide a framework for such delegation. A divisional structure allows decision‐making authority to be pushed down along with accountability for results. Thus, how divisions are established is critical to decision‐making, motivation, and accountability. The ultimate test of a well‐formed division is a high degree of correspondence between division financial results and financial results for the company as a whole. When an increase in divisional EVA can contribute to a decline in company‐wide EVA, this is evidence of a poorly formed division, or what the author calls a “non‐viable” EVA center. This article provides a framework for defining a “viable EVA center” as well as three ways of making existing divisions more viable: (1) use of transfer pricing and intrafirm charges; (2) reorganization; and (3) aggregation of divisional results.