Publication Type
Conference Paper
Version
submittedVersion
Publication Date
10-2017
Abstract
This article examines the effect of imposing higher board independence requirements on private benefit extraction by corporate management or controlling shareholders in Hong Kong and Singapore. This article shows that higher board independence negatively correlates with fewer related-party transactions (RPT), though in a nonlinear relationship with the marginal effect of higher board independence diminished. However, we find no clear causal effect of Hong Kong's imposition of a minimum board independence threshold in 2012 on reducing tunneling. Our data also show that higher concentration of ownership might not be associated with more tunneling by RPTs. Overall, this research lends support to the literature on the role of better corporate governance in addressing agency costs, although the exact effect of a particular change of corporate governance rules on tunneling is unclear, and there could be less utility in imposing even higher board independence requirements beyond a certain optimal level in the future.
Discipline
Asian Studies | International Business
Research Areas
Corporate, Finance and Securities Law
Publication
European Association of Law and Economics Annual Conference 34th EALE 2017, September 14-16, London; 12th Annual Conference on Empirical Legal Studies 2017, October 13-14
Identifier
10.1111/jels.12197
Publisher
IEEE
City or Country
Ithaca, NY
Citation
CHEN, Christopher C. H.; WAN, Wai Yee; and ZHANG, Wei.
Board independence as a panacea to tunneling? An empirical study of related party transactions in Hong Kong and Singapore. (2017). European Association of Law and Economics Annual Conference 34th EALE 2017, September 14-16, London; 12th Annual Conference on Empirical Legal Studies 2017, October 13-14.
Available at: https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/sol_research/2818
Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-No Derivative Works 4.0 International License.
Additional URL
https://doi.org/10.1111/jels.12197