Corporate
Governance
Definitions of Corporate Governance
- "Corporate governance is a field
in economics that investigates how to secure/motivate efficient
management of corporations by the use of incentive mechanisms, such
as contracts, organizational designs and legislation. This is often
limited to the question of improving financial performance, for
example, how the corporate owners can secure/motivate that the
corporate managers will deliver a competitive rate of return",
www.encycogov.com, Mathiesen [2002]. Click here to see how this
definition can be illustrated as a transaction cost based theory of
the managerial agency problem.
- “Corporate governance deals with
the ways in which suppliers of finance to corporations assure
themselves of getting a return on their investment”, The Journal of
Finance, Shleifer and Vishny [1997, page 737].
- "Corporate governance is the
system by which business corporations are directed and controlled.
The corporate governance structure specifies the distribution of
rights and responsibilities among different participants in the
corporation, such as, the board, managers, shareholders and other
stakeholders, and spells out the rules and procedures for making
decisions on corporate affairs. By doing this, it also provides the
structure through which the company objectives are set, and the
means of attaining those objectives and monitoring performance",
OECD April 1999. OECD's definition is consistent with the one
presented by Cadbury [1992, page 15].
- "Corporate governance - which can
be defined narrowly as the relationship of a company to its
shareholders or, more broadly, as its relationship to society -….",
from an article in Financial Times [1997].
- "Corporate governance is about
promoting corporate fairness, transparency and accountability" J.
Wolfensohn, president of the Word bank, as quoted by an article in
Financial Times, June 21, 1999.
- “Some commentators take too narrow
a view, and say it (corporate governance) is the fancy term for the
way in which directors and auditors handle their responsibilities
towards shareholders. Others use the expression as if it were
synonymous with shareholder democracy. Corporate governance is a
topic recently conceived, as yet ill-defined, and consequently
blurred at the edges…corporate governance as a subject, as an
objective, or as a regime to be followed for the good of
shareholders, employees, customers, bankers and indeed for the
reputation and standing of our nation and its economy” Maw et al.
[1994, page 1].
References
http://www.encycogov.com/WhatIsGorpGov.asp
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