Corporate governance,accounting and finance: A review |
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Authors: | Philip Brown Wendy Beekes Peter Verhoeven |
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Affiliation: | 1. Australian School of Business, University of New South Wales, Sydney 2052, Australia;2. Business School, University of Western Australia, Crawley 6009, Australia;3. Management School, Lancaster University, Lancaster LA14YX, UK;4. School of Economics and Finance, Queensland University of Technology, Brisbane 4001, Australia |
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Abstract: | We review accounting and finance research on corporate governance (CG). In the course of our review, we focus on a particularly vexing issue, namely endogeneity in the relationships between CG and other matters of concern to accounting and finance scholars, and suggest ways to deal with it. Given the advent of large commercial CG databases, we also stress the importance of how CG is measured and in particular, the construction of CG indices, which should be sensitive to local institutional arrangements, and the need to capture both internal and external aspects of governance. The ‘stickiness’ of CG characteristics provides an additional challenge to CG scholars. Better theory is required, for example, to explain whether various CG practices substitute for each other or are complements. While a multidisciplinary approach to developing better theory is never without its difficulties, it could enrich the current body of knowledge in CG. Despite the vastness of the existing CG literature, these issues do suggest a number of avenues for future research. |
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Keywords: | Corporate governance Agency costs Directors Duality Board committees Ownership structure Shareholder activism Auditor independence Accounting quality Endogeneity C30 C36 G30 G34 G38 K22 M48 |
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