Dynamic Performance Measurement examines alternative performance measures and their ability to align the interests of owners and managers. It advocates and illustrates the use of dynamic models to examine the incentive properties of commonly used accounting performance metrics. Drawing from recent work in this emerging field, this treatise illustrates how one can use tractable multiperiod models to shed light of fundamental interest to accountants.
The book focuses on the body of research that has reviewed multiperiod models of accrual accounting. The author: examines the choice of goal congruent performance measures; explains how the insights obtained from the goal congruent framework can be adapted to second-best contracting in formal agency models; builds an analytically tractable multiperiod moral hazard model with a risk averse manager to examine the issue of aggregate accounting and non-accounting information in optimal performance measures.