The relationship between corporate independence and firm performance: the case of public listed firms in Malaysia.

This paper examines the relationship between board independence and firm performance in Malaysia. The Malaysian Code of Corporate Governance states that at least one third of board members must be independent. Hence, this evolves the question of whether increased board independence can contribute t...

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Main Authors: Wagner, Karl, Fard, Pooyan Yousefi
Format: Conference or Workshop Item
Language:English
Published: 2009
Subjects:
Online Access:http://eprints.um.edu.my/10900/1/7__The_Relationship_between_Corporate_Independence_and_Firm_Performance.pdf
http://eprints.um.edu.my/10900/
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Institution: Universiti Malaya
Language: English
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spelling my.um.eprints.109002018-10-25T07:27:39Z http://eprints.um.edu.my/10900/ The relationship between corporate independence and firm performance: the case of public listed firms in Malaysia. Wagner, Karl Fard, Pooyan Yousefi G Geography. Anthropology. Recreation This paper examines the relationship between board independence and firm performance in Malaysia. The Malaysian Code of Corporate Governance states that at least one third of board members must be independent. Hence, this evolves the question of whether increased board independence can contribute to better performance. This study proves that those corporations which have more independent board members(more than one third of board members which is obligatory)have better firm performance. We included randomly selected 120 public listed companies in Malaysia’ Stock Exchange Board (KLSE), where the performance is measured for the financial year 2006. While this work has been successfully established this positive relationship, it acknowledges the fact, that there are shortcomings. They include only three independent variables, such as independent board members, board size and firm size. Furthermore, the study is only done for one year, and it only involves 120 companies. Although the number of companies is enough to represent corporate Malaysia, a larger sample size will provide better justification for the empirical findings. Considered all these facts, we can provide strong evidence and conclude that a higher number of independent board members may significantly lead to higher business performance. 2009-09 Conference or Workshop Item PeerReviewed application/pdf en http://eprints.um.edu.my/10900/1/7__The_Relationship_between_Corporate_Independence_and_Firm_Performance.pdf Wagner, Karl and Fard, Pooyan Yousefi (2009) The relationship between corporate independence and firm performance: the case of public listed firms in Malaysia. In: International Conference on Malaysia: Malaysia in Global Perspective, 27-28 September 2009, Cairo University, Egypt.
institution Universiti Malaya
building UM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Malaya
content_source UM Research Repository
url_provider http://eprints.um.edu.my/
language English
topic G Geography. Anthropology. Recreation
spellingShingle G Geography. Anthropology. Recreation
Wagner, Karl
Fard, Pooyan Yousefi
The relationship between corporate independence and firm performance: the case of public listed firms in Malaysia.
description This paper examines the relationship between board independence and firm performance in Malaysia. The Malaysian Code of Corporate Governance states that at least one third of board members must be independent. Hence, this evolves the question of whether increased board independence can contribute to better performance. This study proves that those corporations which have more independent board members(more than one third of board members which is obligatory)have better firm performance. We included randomly selected 120 public listed companies in Malaysia’ Stock Exchange Board (KLSE), where the performance is measured for the financial year 2006. While this work has been successfully established this positive relationship, it acknowledges the fact, that there are shortcomings. They include only three independent variables, such as independent board members, board size and firm size. Furthermore, the study is only done for one year, and it only involves 120 companies. Although the number of companies is enough to represent corporate Malaysia, a larger sample size will provide better justification for the empirical findings. Considered all these facts, we can provide strong evidence and conclude that a higher number of independent board members may significantly lead to higher business performance.
format Conference or Workshop Item
author Wagner, Karl
Fard, Pooyan Yousefi
author_facet Wagner, Karl
Fard, Pooyan Yousefi
author_sort Wagner, Karl
title The relationship between corporate independence and firm performance: the case of public listed firms in Malaysia.
title_short The relationship between corporate independence and firm performance: the case of public listed firms in Malaysia.
title_full The relationship between corporate independence and firm performance: the case of public listed firms in Malaysia.
title_fullStr The relationship between corporate independence and firm performance: the case of public listed firms in Malaysia.
title_full_unstemmed The relationship between corporate independence and firm performance: the case of public listed firms in Malaysia.
title_sort relationship between corporate independence and firm performance: the case of public listed firms in malaysia.
publishDate 2009
url http://eprints.um.edu.my/10900/1/7__The_Relationship_between_Corporate_Independence_and_Firm_Performance.pdf
http://eprints.um.edu.my/10900/
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