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Harry J. Van Buren III

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Title: Harry J. Van Buren III


1
Corporate governance Why it matters for strategy
and ethics
  • Harry J. Van Buren III
  • Anderson School of Management
  • University of New Mexico

2
Corporate governance What is it and why does it
matter?
  • Corporate governance represents the relationship
    among stakeholders that is used to determine and
    control the strategic direction and performance
    of organizations.
  • Corporate governance has both strategic and
    ethical implications.

3
Strategic implications of corporate governance
  • Simply put, bad corporate governance leads to bad
    strategy formulation and implementation.
  • If strategy is about matching the firms internal
    resources and capabilities with opportunities
    from the external environment, then corporate
    governance should ask the following sorts of
    questions

4
Strategic implications of corporate governance (2)
  • Do we have the right strategy, given what we do
    well?
  • Is our strategy matched to the external
    environment (economy, social expectations, etc.)?
  • Are we capable of executing the strategy?
  • Do we have the right top management team?
  • If the answer to one or more of these questions
    is no, what do we need to change?

5
Strategic implications of corporate governance (3)
  • Bad strategy makes it harder for firms to
    fulfill their economic and ethical
    responsibilities to stakeholders, including
    shareholders and employees!

6
Ethical issues in corporate governance
  • There are several key strategic and ethical
    issues in corporate governance, including
  • how to align the interests of top managers and
    shareholders,
  • the proper level and function of executive
    compensation,
  • who monitors the top management team and how that
    monitoring occurs, and
  • inclusion of shareholders and non-shareholder
    stakeholders.

7
Aligning the interests of shareholders and
managers
  • One of the primary issues in corporate
    governance is how to align the interests of
    shareholders and managers.
  • While most people dont object to high levels of
    pay for top managers (such as CEOs and CFOs),
    they expect pay to be connected to performance
    and stock price.

8
Why do we need to align the interests of
shareholders and managers?
  • At one time in U.S. history, firms were owned
    and managed by founders and their descendents. As
    firms grew larger, they needed more capital than
    could easily be provided by one person or family,
    and so the public corporation became more common.

9
Why do we need to align the interests of
shareholders and managers? (2)
  • Corporations have two important virtues
  • They allow shareholders (investors) to reduce
    risk by limiting their liability to the value of
    their investment.
  • They allow shareholders to buy and sell their
    ownership interests easily.
  • But there is a big problem that creates a
    potential misalignment of interests between
    shareholders and managers
  • The Separation of Ownership and Control!

10
Why do we need to align the interests of
shareholders and managers? (3)
  • Managers have day-to-day control of the company.
    The top management team, for example, is in
    charge of things such as strategy, hiring and
    firing employees, and so on.
  • Shareholders dont own the corporation in the
    same way that you own your car they dont have
    physical possession of a part of the corporation.
    Rather, what they own is a limited set of
    decision rights, the right to share financially
    in the companys success, and a pro-rata share of
    the company after all of its debts are paid if
    the company is liquidated.

11
Why do we need to align the interests of
shareholders and managers? (4)
  • The separation of ownership and control leads to
    a principal-agent relationship.
  • The principal directs the activities of the
    agent.
  • The agent acts on behalf of the principal, based
    on the principals direction. The agent owes a
    duty of loyalty to the principal.
  • For public corporations, shareholders are
    principals and managers are agents an agency
    problem exists when agents have incentives to act
    in ways that are contrary to the interests of
    their principals.

12
Why do we need to align the interests of
shareholders and managers? (5)
  • What makes agency problems particularly likely
    in public corporations is the large number of
    ever-changing principals (shareholders holding
    their stock for varying periods of time), all of
    whom would be better off if some shareholders
    would monitor the firms managers.
  • Less monitoring of managers by shareholders than
    is optimal occurs because monitoring is costly,
    but all shareholders benefit from the actions of
    the few that engage in monitoring (the free-rider
    problem). Think of it this way Would you always
    behave perfectly if no one was watching you?

13
How do top managers misbehave?
  • Because of agency problems, managers have
    incentives to do things that benefit themselves
    at the expense of shareholders and other
    stakeholders (too high compensation,
    over-diversification, mergers, etc.).

14
Alignment Mechanism 1Executive compensation
  • The average compensation of a Fortune 500 CEO in
    2007 was 364 times that of the average worker. An
    Economic Policy Institute study found that
    between 1989 and 2007, CEO pay increased by 163
    percent, compared with only 10 percent for the
    average worker (both adjusted for inflation).
  • A number of studies have found that there is no
    correlation between executive compensation and
    firm performance, and recent work by Erickson,
    Hanlon, and Maydew (2003) found that executive
    compensation plans weighted more heavily toward
    stock compensation were related to the incidence
    of accounting fraud.

15
Alignment mechanism 1Executive compensation (2)
  • There is evidence that (1) top managers have too
    much influence on setting their own pay and (2)
    boards have not done a good job of connecting
    executive compensation to performance (however
    performance is defined).
  • Recent scandals involving insider trading have
    added to cynicism about business, and pay that is
    too high relative to performance may make the
    company a target of criticism.

16
Alignment mechanism 1Executive compensation (3)
  • Good executive compensation plans take into
    account a variety of strategic and financial
    indicators and then reward for superior
    performance relative to industry peers, rather
    than absolute levels of stock performance.
  • In the absence of good information about a
    corporations performance and strategies,
    shareholders and other stakeholders are unable to
    adequately evaluate top-manager performanceand
    over-compensation of top managers is a likely
    result.

17
Alignment mechanism 2 Boards of directors
  • Remember that shareholders are not in charge of
    the day-to-day operations of a corporation.
    Rather, they elect directors who then hire
    managers charged with formulating and
    implementing the companys strategy.
  • However, shareholders have little control over
    who is nominated to the board of directors. Only
    under very limited circumstances can they even
    nominate a minority of the companys directors.

18
Alignment mechanism 2Boards of directors (2)
  • As a result, members of a companys board of
    directors may feel more beholden to the CEO and
    the top management team than to the shareholders
    in whose interests they are supposed to be
    acting.
  • Boards should be focused on evaluating the
    organizations (strategic and financial)
    performance and firing top managers when that
    performance is substandard and unlikely to
    improve.

19
Alignment mechanism 2Boards of directors (3)
  • Boards should also have a respectful relationship
    with the top management team, think of themselves
    as independent from the CEO, and evaluate their
    own performance on a regular basis. Such boards
    do a better job of protecting shareholder value.

20
Alignment mechanism 3The market for corporate
control
  • When a company is perceived to be financially
    undervalued, there is the possibility that it can
    be taken over (often through a hostile takeover).
    When this happens, there is often a new
    management team and strategy put into place.
  • Some observers propose that the threat of being
    taken over if the corporation is
    underperformingwhat is called the market for
    corporate controlprovides an additional means of
    aligning the interests of shareholders and
    managers.

21
The role of institutional failures in corporate
governance
  • Many of the well-known corporate-governance
    failures are due to widespread institutional
    failures, including failures by regulators,
    accounting firms, and financial analysts. Take
    one of these failures out of the equation, and
    perhaps some of the problems observed in the last
    ten years might not have occurred.
  • In particular, the incentive structures of
    accounting firms and financial analysts caused
    many of them not to provide appropriate oversight
    and criticism of corporate managers. In the
    absence of effective monitoring of managers, bad
    things tend to happen to companies.

22
Including non-shareholder stakeholders in
corporate governance
  • Ethicists argue that although non-shareholder
    stakeholders do not get to vote like shareholders
    do (and as was noted before, that vote is limited
    in its scope), their interests should be taken
    into account in corporate governance processes.
  • Companies, managers, and boards that take a
    long-term view of the organizations strategy
    might want to consider the interests of
    non-shareholder stakeholders very directly, as
    they can affect (positively or negatively) the
    organizations ability to create value for
    shareholders.

23
Ethical duties managers and boards owe
shareholders
  • Accurate and timely information about the
    corporations performance and business prospects,
    so shareholders can make informed decisions about
    their investments.
  • Best efforts to enhance shareholder wealth
  • Avoidance of self-serving behavior.

24
A final comment. . .
  • Its pretty apparent that many boards have failed
    to do their jobs. That said, shareholders and
    non-shareholder stakeholders have a role to play
    in corporate governanceand part of the blame for
    recent corporate governance debacles rests with
    them. Shareholders should demand more of managers
    and boards.

25
Whats likely to happen with corporate governance
in the future?
  1. Greater expectations for transparency in
    financial and social reporting.
  2. Increased expectations for board involvement in
    strategy setting and developing responses to
    social issues.

26
The role of government, accounting firms, and
other parties
  • Bills like the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2003
    represent attempts to deal with inherent agency
    problems and conflicts of interest (on the
    latter, issues like auditor independence). Boards
    and senior managers are much more accountable for
    the accuracy of their financial reporting than
    before.

27
Whats likely to happen with corporate governance
in the future? (2)
  1. Greater involvement by institutional shareholders
    (pension funds, mutual funds) in corporate
    governance processes.
  2. Greater oversight of corporate boards and
    managers by regulators, shareholders, and
    non-shareholder stakeholders.
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