High disagreement leads to overinvestment and debt financing in corporations.
The study looked at how companies make financial decisions when managers and outside investors don't agree. When there is a lot of disagreement, companies tend to invest too much and use more debt. When there is less disagreement, they invest too little and use more equity. Using outside financing instead of using their own money leads to lower investment levels and less over or under-investment. The study's findings were confirmed through numerical simulations.