articleStrategic Management JournalMar 25, 2004Closed access

Outside directors and firm performance during institutional transitions

The Ohio State University

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Abstract

Abstract Do outside directors on corporate boards make a difference in firm performance during institutional transitions? What leads to the practice of appointing outside directors in the absence of legal mandate? This article addresses these two important questions by drawing not only on agency theory, but also resource dependence and institutional theories. Taking advantage of China's institutional transitions, our findings, based on an archival database covering 405 publicly listed firms and 1211 company–years, suggest that outsider directors do make a difference in firm performance, if such performance is measured by sales growth, and that they have little impact on financial performance such as return on…

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719
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100%
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Authors

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Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Bandwagon effect
  • Corporate governance
  • Mandate
  • Accounting
  • Principal–agent problem
  • Resource dependence theory
  • Business
  • Agency (philosophy)
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