The Role of Boards of Directors in Corporate Governance: A Conceptual Framework and Survey
This paper is a survey of the literature on boards of directors, with an emphasis on research done subsequent to the Hermalin and Weisbach (2003) survey. The two questions most asked about boards are what determines their makeup and what determines their actions? These questions are fundamentally intertwined, which complicates the study of boards because makeup and actions are jointly endogenous. A focus of this survey is how the literature, theoretical as well as empirically, deals--or on occasions fails to deal--with this complication. We suggest that many studies of boards can best be interpreted as joint statements about both the director-selection process and the effect of board composition on board actions and firm performance.
Year of publication: |
2009-04
|
---|---|
Authors: | Adams, Renee ; Hermalin, Benjamin E. ; Weisbach, Michael S. |
Institutions: | Charles A. Dice Center for Research in Financial Economics, Fisher College of Business |
Saved in:
freely available
Saved in favorites
Similar items by person
-
Information Disclosure and Corporate Governance
Hermalin, Benjamin E., (2009)
-
What Do Boards Really Do? Evidence from Minutes of Board Meetings
Schwartz-Ziv, Miriam, (2011)
-
Syndicated Loan Spreads and the Composition of the Syndicate
Lim, Jongha, (2012)
- More ...