Publication | Open Access
Who's Monitoring the Monitor? Do Outside Directors Protect Shareholders' Interests?
89
Citations
24
References
2005
Year
Ownership StructureFirm PerformanceCorporate ManagementBoard CompositionManagementBusinessLawCorporate LawCorporate Governance LiteratureCorporate GovernanceCorporate ComplianceFinancial MonitoringDirectors Protect ShareholdersCorporate Finance
Abstract The corporate governance literature is rich with empirical tests of the relation between board composition and firm performance. We consider the effect of board composition on a different measure of performance, the probability a firm will be sued by shareholders. We find firms that are defendants in securities litigation have higher proportions of insiders and of gray directors and have smaller boards than a matched group of firms that are not sued, even when controlling for firm value and industry. The results suggest that boards with higher proportions of outside directors do a better job of monitoring management.
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