articleEuropean Journal of FinanceNov 5, 2008Closed access

The impact of board size on firm performance: evidence from the UK

Cranfield University

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Abstract

We examine the impact of board size on firm performance for a large sample of 2746 UK listed firms over 1981–2002. The UK provides an interesting institutional setting, because UK boards play a weak monitoring role and therefore any negative effect of large board size is likely to reflect the malfunction of the board's advisory rather than monitoring role. We find that board size has a strong negative impact on profitability, Tobin's Q and share returns. This result is robust across econometric models that control for different types of endogeneity. We find no evidence that firm characteristics that determine board size in the UK lead to a more positive board size–firm performance relation. In contrast, we…

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Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Endogeneity
  • Profitability index
  • Business
  • Accounting
  • Control (management)
  • Corporate governance
  • Econometrics
  • On board
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