详情
Board Independence and Family Control
The issues concerning the governance mechanism of board independence and its
determinants remain controversial in the field of corporate finance. Particularly, the
association between the properties of family power and board independence is yet
comprehensively discussed and is crucial important for the financial market in
Europe and Asia. We set out in our study to identify the determinants of board
independence with the sample of listed firms in Taiwan from 2002 to 2006 based on
the notions that independent boards play an important role to enhance corporate
governance mechanism. The argument that the higher involvement of family power in
the board room is harmful to the board independence is expected. The evidence shows
that firms with larger size and greater opportunities of managers to consume private
benefits tend to hire more independent directors. Besides, higher growth opportunities,
as well as greater outsider influence provide the same positive effect on appointing
independent directors. Regarding to the most important evidence, firms with greater
proportion of family members on the directorship reduce the tendency to appoint more
independent directors; moreover, the higher percentage of shares owned by family
members provides the positive effect on board independence. However, firm age is
found to have a contradictory effect to that reported in the prior studies and firms
which are more seasoned do not necessarily tend to hire more independent directors.
Furthermore, we also compare board structures across different firm sizes and find
that board composition in small and large firms is extremely divergent. We tend to
contribute to the literatures with the evidence that firms with greater influence of
power of family directorship on the board meeting are burdened with severe problem
of less independence of the board.