This paper compares centralized and decentralized coordination when managers are privately informed and communicate strategically. We consider a multidivisional organization in which decisions must be adapted to local conditions but also coordinated with each other. Information about local conditions is dispersed and held by self-interested division managers who communicate via cheap talk. The only available formal mechanism is the allocation of decision rights. We show that a higher need for coordination improves horizontal communication but worsens vertical communication. As a result, decentralization can dominate centralization even when coordination is extremely important relative to adaptation.
Published in American Economic Review, March, 2008, 98(1), pp. 145-179. ISSN: 0002-8282
Classification:
D23 - Organizational Behavior; Transaction Costs; Property Rights ; D83 - Search, Learning, Information and Knowledge ; L23 - Organization of Production ; M11 - Production Management