A clash of governance logics: foreign ownership and board monitoring
Publisher:
Wiley
Issued date:
2016-02-01
Citation:
Desender, K. A., Aguilera, R. V., Lópezpuertas-Lamy, M., & Crespi, R. (2014). A clash of governance logics: Foreign ownership and board monitoring. Strategic Management Journal, 37 (2), pp. 349-369.
ISSN:
0143-2095
xmlui.dri2xhtml.METS-1.0.item-contributor-funder:
Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación (España)
Sponsor:
The authors also acknowledge support from the Fundación Juan March, Fundación Ramon Areces, Projects ECO2010-22105-C03-03, ECO2010-21393-C04-01, ECO2010-21393-C04-02, and ECO2013-48328-C03-3-P financed by the Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation.
Project:
Gobierno de España. ECO2010-22105-C03-03
Gobierno de España. ECO2010-21393-C04-01
Gobierno de España. ECO2010-21393-C04-02
Gobierno de España. ECO2013-48328-C03-3-P
Keywords:
Corporate Governance
,
Ownership
,
Board Monitoring
,
Board Of Directors
,
Audit Fees
,
Corporate governance
,
Ownership
,
Board monitoring
,
Board of directors
,
Directors
,
Audit fees
,
Compensation
Rights:
© 2014 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
Abstract:
We ask whether and when shareholder-oriented foreign owners are likely to change corporate governance logics in a stakeholder-oriented setting by introducing shareholder-oriented governance practices. We focus on board monitoring and claim that because the bun
We ask whether and when shareholder-oriented foreign owners are likely to change corporate governance logics in a stakeholder-oriented setting by introducing shareholder-oriented governance practices. We focus on board monitoring and claim that because the bundle of practices used in a stakeholder context does not protect shareholder-oriented foreign owners' interests, they seek to introduce their own practices. Our results suggest that board monitoring is only activated when shareholder-oriented foreign ownership is high and that the influence of foreign ownership is especially strong in firms without large domestic owners, with high levels of risk and poor performance. Our findings uncover the possibility of the co-existence of different corporate governance logics within a given country, shaped by the nature and weight of foreign owners
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