Substitutes or complements? A configurational examination of corporate governance mechanisms
We conduct an exploratory qualitative comparative case analysis of the S&P 1500 firms with the aim of elaborating theory on how corporate governance mechanisms work together effectively. To do so, we integrate extant theory and research to specify the bundle of mechanisms that operate to mitigat...
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sg-smu-ink.lkcsb_research-53532019-11-26T07:04:58Z Substitutes or complements? A configurational examination of corporate governance mechanisms MISANGYI, Vilmos ACHARYA, Abhijith G. We conduct an exploratory qualitative comparative case analysis of the S&P 1500 firms with the aim of elaborating theory on how corporate governance mechanisms work together effectively. To do so, we integrate extant theory and research to specify the bundle of mechanisms that operate to mitigate the agency problem among publicly traded corporations and review what previous research has said about how these mechanisms combine. We then use the fuzzy-set approach to qualitative comparitive analysis (QCA) to explore the combinations of governance mechanisms that exist among the S&P 1500 firms that achieve high (and not-high) profitability. Our findings suggest that high profits result when CEO incentive alignment and monitoring mech- anisms work together as complements rather than as substitutes. Furthermore, they show that high profits are obtained when both internal and external monitoring mechanisms are present. At the same time, however, monitoring mechanisms evi- dently combine in complex ways such that there may be simultaneity of substitution and complementarity among and across the various monitoring and control mecha- nisms. Our findings clearly suggest that the effectiveness of board independence and CEO non-duality—governance mechanisms widely believed to singularly resolve the agency problem—depends on how each combine with the other mechanisms in the governance bundle. 2014-12-01T08:00:00Z text application/pdf https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/lkcsb_research/4354 info:doi/10.5465/amj.2012.0728 https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/context/lkcsb_research/article/5353/viewcontent/MisangyiAcharya2014_SubstitutesorComplements_Aconfigurationalexaminationofcorporategovernacnemechanisms_AMJ.pdf http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ Research Collection Lee Kong Chian School Of Business eng Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University ownership structure CEO pay institutional investors executive-compensation managerial incentives financial performance board composition firm performance strategic change labor contracts Business Business Law, Public Responsibility, and Ethics Strategic Management Policy |
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ownership structure CEO pay institutional investors executive-compensation managerial incentives financial performance board composition firm performance strategic change labor contracts Business Business Law, Public Responsibility, and Ethics Strategic Management Policy MISANGYI, Vilmos ACHARYA, Abhijith G. Substitutes or complements? A configurational examination of corporate governance mechanisms |
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We conduct an exploratory qualitative comparative case analysis of the S&P 1500 firms with the aim of elaborating theory on how corporate governance mechanisms work together effectively. To do so, we integrate extant theory and research to specify the bundle of mechanisms that operate to mitigate the agency problem among publicly traded corporations and review what previous research has said about how these mechanisms combine. We then use the fuzzy-set approach to qualitative comparitive analysis (QCA) to explore the combinations of governance mechanisms that exist among the S&P 1500 firms that achieve high (and not-high) profitability. Our findings suggest that high profits result when CEO incentive alignment and monitoring mech- anisms work together as complements rather than as substitutes. Furthermore, they show that high profits are obtained when both internal and external monitoring mechanisms are present. At the same time, however, monitoring mechanisms evi- dently combine in complex ways such that there may be simultaneity of substitution and complementarity among and across the various monitoring and control mecha- nisms. Our findings clearly suggest that the effectiveness of board independence and CEO non-duality—governance mechanisms widely believed to singularly resolve the agency problem—depends on how each combine with the other mechanisms in the governance bundle. |
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text |
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MISANGYI, Vilmos ACHARYA, Abhijith G. |
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MISANGYI, Vilmos ACHARYA, Abhijith G. |
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MISANGYI, Vilmos |
title |
Substitutes or complements? A configurational examination of corporate governance mechanisms |
title_short |
Substitutes or complements? A configurational examination of corporate governance mechanisms |
title_full |
Substitutes or complements? A configurational examination of corporate governance mechanisms |
title_fullStr |
Substitutes or complements? A configurational examination of corporate governance mechanisms |
title_full_unstemmed |
Substitutes or complements? A configurational examination of corporate governance mechanisms |
title_sort |
substitutes or complements? a configurational examination of corporate governance mechanisms |
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Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University |
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2014 |
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https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/lkcsb_research/4354 https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/context/lkcsb_research/article/5353/viewcontent/MisangyiAcharya2014_SubstitutesorComplements_Aconfigurationalexaminationofcorporategovernacnemechanisms_AMJ.pdf |
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