Corporate governance, firm performance and Chinese state enterprise reform / Zhang Cheng

While corporate governance continues to play an important role in economic development, corporate governance issues are more complex in transition economies than in the developed market economies. Consequently, policy makers in transition economies have been busy attempting to establish a sound corp...

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Main Author: Zhang, Cheng
Format: Thesis
Published: 2017
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http://studentsrepo.um.edu.my/8360/6/zhang.c.pdf
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spelling my.um.stud.83602020-09-08T22:04:26Z Corporate governance, firm performance and Chinese state enterprise reform / Zhang Cheng Zhang, Cheng HD Industries. Land use. Labor HF Commerce While corporate governance continues to play an important role in economic development, corporate governance issues are more complex in transition economies than in the developed market economies. Consequently, policy makers in transition economies have been busy attempting to establish a sound corporate governance system in their countries. This study uses China as a laboratory to explore corporate governance issues, as China is not only the most populous economy in the world, it is also undergoing transition from a socialist to a market economy since 1978. The need for strengthening corporate governance in the country has become all the more pressing as rapid economic growth has transformed the economy since especially the 1990s. China experienced a watershed in corporate governance when the split-share structure reform was introduced. Hence, we analyse in this thesis the impact of this reform on board composition, firm performance, and firm risk over the period before and after the introduction of the reform. Firms are classified by ownership into central government, local government, state owned enterprise (SOE) and privately controlled firms based on ultimate controlling shareholders. The study deploys static and dynamic panel data estimation methods to examine the determinants of corporate board composition, relationships between corporate governance mechanisms and firm performance, and the relationships between corporate governance mechanisms and firm risk. The results show that Chinese corporate board composition is jointly determined by the scope of operation (resource dependent theory), monitoring (agency theory), bargaining (power theory), other governance mechanisms (stakeholder theory) and regulations (institution theory). The government was the most important player in constituting board composition before the split-share structure reform was introduced, but independent directors became more important than other governance mechanisms after that. Private firms and SOEs are more concerned about cost than other factors when adding independent directors. Also, corporate board exerts a positive influence on firm performance once the share of independent directors reached 30 percent. Although the supervisory board can make up for the inadequate number of independent directors, its role became insignificant after the reform. Central government controlled firms show outstanding accounting and market performance. While increasing corporate board size reduced firm risk, its independence increased firm risk. State ownership and ownership concentration increased firm risk after reforms. Overall, the findings confirm the applicability of corporate governance theories to China. Other transition economies can draw lessons from the institutional change that have played a significant role in the evolving Chinese corporate governance system. Government-controlled firms should be more market-oriented so as to reduce the unnecessary influence of political power on firms activities. It also sheds light on the partial privatization approach that may work for other transition economies. 2017-10 Thesis NonPeerReviewed application/pdf http://studentsrepo.um.edu.my/8360/2/All.pdf application/pdf http://studentsrepo.um.edu.my/8360/6/zhang.c.pdf Zhang, Cheng (2017) Corporate governance, firm performance and Chinese state enterprise reform / Zhang Cheng. PhD thesis, University of Malaya. http://studentsrepo.um.edu.my/8360/
institution Universiti Malaya
building UM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Malaya
content_source UM Student Repository
url_provider http://studentsrepo.um.edu.my/
topic HD Industries. Land use. Labor
HF Commerce
spellingShingle HD Industries. Land use. Labor
HF Commerce
Zhang, Cheng
Corporate governance, firm performance and Chinese state enterprise reform / Zhang Cheng
description While corporate governance continues to play an important role in economic development, corporate governance issues are more complex in transition economies than in the developed market economies. Consequently, policy makers in transition economies have been busy attempting to establish a sound corporate governance system in their countries. This study uses China as a laboratory to explore corporate governance issues, as China is not only the most populous economy in the world, it is also undergoing transition from a socialist to a market economy since 1978. The need for strengthening corporate governance in the country has become all the more pressing as rapid economic growth has transformed the economy since especially the 1990s. China experienced a watershed in corporate governance when the split-share structure reform was introduced. Hence, we analyse in this thesis the impact of this reform on board composition, firm performance, and firm risk over the period before and after the introduction of the reform. Firms are classified by ownership into central government, local government, state owned enterprise (SOE) and privately controlled firms based on ultimate controlling shareholders. The study deploys static and dynamic panel data estimation methods to examine the determinants of corporate board composition, relationships between corporate governance mechanisms and firm performance, and the relationships between corporate governance mechanisms and firm risk. The results show that Chinese corporate board composition is jointly determined by the scope of operation (resource dependent theory), monitoring (agency theory), bargaining (power theory), other governance mechanisms (stakeholder theory) and regulations (institution theory). The government was the most important player in constituting board composition before the split-share structure reform was introduced, but independent directors became more important than other governance mechanisms after that. Private firms and SOEs are more concerned about cost than other factors when adding independent directors. Also, corporate board exerts a positive influence on firm performance once the share of independent directors reached 30 percent. Although the supervisory board can make up for the inadequate number of independent directors, its role became insignificant after the reform. Central government controlled firms show outstanding accounting and market performance. While increasing corporate board size reduced firm risk, its independence increased firm risk. State ownership and ownership concentration increased firm risk after reforms. Overall, the findings confirm the applicability of corporate governance theories to China. Other transition economies can draw lessons from the institutional change that have played a significant role in the evolving Chinese corporate governance system. Government-controlled firms should be more market-oriented so as to reduce the unnecessary influence of political power on firms activities. It also sheds light on the partial privatization approach that may work for other transition economies.
format Thesis
author Zhang, Cheng
author_facet Zhang, Cheng
author_sort Zhang, Cheng
title Corporate governance, firm performance and Chinese state enterprise reform / Zhang Cheng
title_short Corporate governance, firm performance and Chinese state enterprise reform / Zhang Cheng
title_full Corporate governance, firm performance and Chinese state enterprise reform / Zhang Cheng
title_fullStr Corporate governance, firm performance and Chinese state enterprise reform / Zhang Cheng
title_full_unstemmed Corporate governance, firm performance and Chinese state enterprise reform / Zhang Cheng
title_sort corporate governance, firm performance and chinese state enterprise reform / zhang cheng
publishDate 2017
url http://studentsrepo.um.edu.my/8360/2/All.pdf
http://studentsrepo.um.edu.my/8360/6/zhang.c.pdf
http://studentsrepo.um.edu.my/8360/
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score 13.211869