Ownership Concentration, Monitoring and Optimal Board Structure

The paper analyzes the optimal structure of board of directors in a firm with ownership concentrated in the hands of a large shareholder who sits on the board. We focus our attention on the choice between one-tier board who performs all tasks and two-tier board where the management board is in charge of project selection and the supervisory board is in charge of monitoring. We consider the case in which the large shareholder sits on (and controls) the supervisory board but not the management board. We show that a two-tier structure can limit the interference of large shareholders and can restore manager’s incentive to exert effort to become informed on new investment projects without reducing the large, shareholder’s incentive to monitor the manager. This results in higher expected profits in a two-tier board than in one-tier board and the difference in profits can be sufficiently high to induce large shareholders to prefer a two-tier board despite the fact that in this case the manager selects his preferred projects rather than the project preferred by large shareholders. The paper has interesting policy implications since it suggests that two-tier boards can be a valuable option in Continental Europe where ownership structure is concentrated. It also offers support to some recent corporate governance reforms, like the so-called Vietti reform in Italy, that have introduced the possibility to choose between one-tier and two-tier structure of boards for listed firms.

[1]  Daniel Ferreira,et al.  A Theory of Friendly Boards , 2007 .

[2]  Antoinette Schoar,et al.  The Role of Family in Family Firms , 2006 .

[3]  Giorgio Brunello,et al.  Executive compensation and firm performance in Italy , 2001 .

[4]  Artur Raviv,et al.  A Theory of Board Control and Size , 2008 .

[5]  Armin Falk,et al.  Distrust - the Hidden Cost of Control , 2004, SSRN Electronic Journal.

[6]  Benjamin E. Hermalin,et al.  Trends in Corporate Governance , 2003 .

[7]  A. Shleifer,et al.  A Survey of Corporate Governance , 1996 .

[8]  Ronald C. Anderson,et al.  Who Monitors the Family? , 2003 .

[9]  Denis Gromb,et al.  Large Shareholders, Monitoring, and the Value of the Firm , 1997 .

[10]  Lorne Jeremy Zeiler Boards of Directors as an Endogenously Determined Institution: A Survey of the Economic Literature , 2004 .

[11]  Andrei Shleifer,et al.  Corporate Ownership Around the World , 1998 .

[12]  Vincent A. Warther Board effectiveness and board dissent: A model of the board's relationship to management and shareholders , 1998 .

[13]  Benjamin E. Hermalin,et al.  Endogenously Chosen Boards of Directors and Their Monitoring of the CEO , 1998 .

[14]  Benjamin E. Hermalin,et al.  Boards of Directors as an Endogenously Determined Institution: A Survey of the Economic Literature , 2000 .

[15]  Rafel Crespí-Cladera,et al.  Total Board Compensation, Governance and Performance of Spanish Listed Companies , 2003 .

[16]  K. Hopt,et al.  Board Models in Europe – Recent Developments of Internal Corporate Governance Structures in Germany, the United Kingdom, France, and Italy , 2004 .

[17]  D. Hirshleifer,et al.  Corporate Control Through Board Dismissals and Takeovers , 1998 .

[18]  J. Tirole,et al.  Formal and Real Authority in Organizations , 1997, Journal of Political Economy.

[19]  Benjamin E. Hermalin,et al.  Board of Directors as an Endogenously Determined Institution: A Survey of the Economic Literature. (Part 1: A Review of the Literature on Corporate Governance) , 2003 .

[20]  Raphael Amit,et al.  How Do Family Ownership, Control, and Management Affect Firm Value? , 2006 .

[21]  Board Efficiency and Internal Corporate Control Mechanisms , 2003 .

[22]  Larry H. P. Lang,et al.  The Ultimate Ownership of Western European Corporations , 2002 .