Board independence, firm performance and ownership concentration: Evidence from Chile
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Date
2008
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Publisher
ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
Abstract
What determines the composition of companies' boards in the context of high ownership concentration? Are independent directors important as an internal governance mechanism in companies with high ownership concentration? Do markets favor companies whose controlling shareholders use voting rights to elect professional directors?
Using a four-year, 160-company panel data, and controlling for endogeneity, this paper addresses these three related questions, finding that an increase in the proportion of outside directors affects company value. The paper also finds that companies that present more exacerbated agency conflicts tend to incorporate professional directors to the boards, in an effort to improve corporate governance and ameliorate the agency problem. (C) 2007 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Using a four-year, 160-company panel data, and controlling for endogeneity, this paper addresses these three related questions, finding that an increase in the proportion of outside directors affects company value. The paper also finds that companies that present more exacerbated agency conflicts tend to incorporate professional directors to the boards, in an effort to improve corporate governance and ameliorate the agency problem. (C) 2007 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Description
Keywords
boards, corporate governance, ownership structure, emerging economics, Chile, CORPORATE GOVERNANCE, DIRECTORS