Based on an analysis of over 600 large and mid-cap U.S. publicly listed companies from 2001 to 2015, this paper provides systematic evidence that a long-term approach can lead to superior performance for revenue and earnings, investment, market capitalization, and job creation.

Download Report

Corporate short-termism has been the subject of ongoing debate among leaders in business, government, and academia for decades, but hard evidence on the impact of short-termism on company performance and economic growth has remained scarce.

To fill this gap, MGI created a systematic measurement of long- and short-termism at the company level. Its findings show that companies classified as “long term” outperform their shorter-term peers on a range of key economic and financial metrics.

Based on an analysis of 615 large and mid-cap U.S. publicly listed companies from 2001 to 2015, the paper’s findings highlight the benefits to long-termism, including:

Innovation | Article

AI’s Payoff Problem Is Not About Technology. It’s About Time Horizons.

By Jessica Pollock

18 September 2025 - At first glance, headlines suggest AI has overpromised and underdelivered. But the real issue is not technology. It is timing.

Learn More

In the News

We’ll FOM See How Long the Risks Can Be Ignored

17 September 2025 - Investors say stocks are overvalued and expect inflation. Yet they can’t stop buying.

Learn More

Governance | Case Study

The Role of a Robust Governance Model in Ensuring Business Perpetuity

By Votorantim and FCLTGlobal

15 September 2025 - Long-term boards evolve to achieve the corporation’s future ambitions rather than remaining anchored to its status quo. This is true for any company that aims to thrive over time as its circumstances change. Changing circumstances affect corporate strategy and, in turn, the needs that the company has of its board.

Learn More