An empirical investigation of hybrid corporate governance systems in large firms : evidence from India
conference contribution
posted on 2010-01-01, 00:00authored byVijaya Thyil, Suzanne Young
The heightened pace of corporate governance reforms has focussed attention on countryspecific governance models. In relation to India, scholars have observed that a hybrid of the outsider Anglo-Saxon system and the insider Continental system is likely. This paper reports the results of a study that investigated the corporate governance system of five large firms in 2008. It presents evidence based on publicly available documents and twelve key executive interviews. The paper initially presents a literature review and establishes six propositions based on the distinguishing features of the two major systems, and then presents the methodology, findings and discussion. The governance characteristics of the Indian firms are classified in terms of the two systems with a view to assessing the extent and nature of hybridization. The findings endorse the hybrid corporate governance system in India. However, the scope of this study was limited to large listed companies and business groups. Future research should use a larger and more diverse sample including private and unaffiliated firms for outcomes that can be generalized.
History
Event
International Federation of Scholarly Associations of Management World Congress (10th : 2010 : Paris, France)
Pagination
1 - 21
Publisher
IFSAM
Location
Paris, France
Place of publication
[Paris, France]
Start date
2010-07-08
End date
2010-07-10
Language
eng
Notes
Reproduced with the kind permission of the copyright owner.
Publication classification
E1 Full written paper - refereed
Copyright notice
2010, IFSAM
Title of proceedings
IFSAM 2010 : Proceedings of the International Federation of Scholarly Associations of Management World Congress : Justice and Sustainability in the Global Economy