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Corporate governance and firm efficiency: Evidence from China's publicly listed firms
Authors
Aivazian
Allen
+45 more
Allen
Banker
Black
Boubakri
Boycko
Chen
Chen
Cooper
Cooper
CSRC
Dalton
Denis
Djankov
Dnes
Estrin
Fama
Fan
Firth
Firth
Färe
Himmelberg
Huson
Johnson
Kornai
La Porta
La Porta
Lin
Liu
Megginson
Megginson
Morck
Qian
Shleifer
Shleifer
Shleifer
Simar
Simar
Su
Sun
Vickers
Wei
Zelenyuk
Zhang
Zhang
Zheka
Publication date
1 January 2009
Publisher
'Wiley'
Doi
Abstract
This paper applies a two-stage, double bootstrapping data envelope analysis approach to investigate whether and to what extent various distinctive corporate governance practices affect productive efficiency in a sample of 461 publicly listed manufacturing firms in China between 1999 and 2002. We find that firm efficiency is negatively related to state ownership while positively related to public and employee share ownership. In addition, the relationship between ownership concentration and firm efficiency is U-shaped, indicating the presence of tunneling activities by the largest shareholder. Among three types of controlling shareholder, state exerts the most negative impact on firm efficiency, followed by state-owned legal entities. These results provide strong evidence that political interferences have reduced firm efficiency. It shows that the proportion of outside directors and the number of board meetings are positively associated with firm efficiency, suggesting that board of directors can be an effective internal governance mechanism. Furthermore, provincial market development, a proxy for the strength of external governance mechanism, is positively related to firm efficiency. Overall, our findings illustrate that restructuring state-owned enterprises via improvements in corporate governance has enhanced firm efficiency, but partial privatization without transfer of ownership and control from the state to the public remains a major source of inefficiency in corporate China. Copyright © 2008 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.postprin
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Last time updated on 26/11/2020
HKU Scholars Hub
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oai:hub.hku.hk:10722/192330
Last time updated on 01/06/2016