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Board structure and firm performance : evidence from an emerging economy

Version 2 2024-06-04, 03:58
Version 1 2023-10-26, 03:22
journal contribution
posted on 2024-06-04, 03:58 authored by Mohammad MuttakinMohammad Muttakin, Arifur KhanArifur Khan, N Subramaniam
We investigate the relationship between corporate board structure and firm performance of Bangladeshi companies. Using a sample of 654 firm- year observations for the period 2005-2009, the results show some support for aspects of agency theory as a greater proportion of independent directors on boards is related to better firm performance. Supporting resource dependence theory our result also suggest that larger boards provide valuable business experience, expertise, skill and social and professional networks which might add substantial business resources to the firms and thus positively impact on performance. We also find that female and foreign directors in Bangladesh provide more monitoring which leads to better firm performance. Our study contributes to extant research on board structure–performance relationship by providing evidence from an emerging economy context which is characterised by ownership concentration, family dominance and poor regulatory oversight.

History

Journal

Academy of Taiwan business management review

Volume

8

Pagination

97-108

Location

Taichung City, Taiwan

ISSN

1813-0534

Language

eng

Publication classification

C Journal article, C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

©2012, Taiwan Institute of Business Administration

Issue

2

Publisher

Taiwan Institute of Business Administration

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