What Matters Between the Boardroom Communication and Corporate Performance: Examining the Roles of CEO's Power and Board Monitoring
Abstract
This paper examines the moderating effects of Chief Executive
Officer (CEO) leadership and board monitoring on the relationship
between board activities and firm performance. Results based on a
sample collected from publicly-listed companies in the Colombo
Stock Exchange in Sri Lanka show that frequency of board meetings
exerts a positive effect on firm performance. Consistent with the
proposition of agency theory, CEO's excessive leadership power
shows a negative moderating effect, however, out of our prediction,
CEO duality reveals a positive moderating effect, supporting the
stewardship perspective. Moreover, board ownership plays a
positive moderating role. The study contributes to corporate
governance literature by examining CEO leadership and board
monitoring as critical moderating factors and thus explicate the
inconclusive relationship between board activities and firm
performance. In doing so, our study enhances the understanding of
managerial contexts where the power dynamics between the CEO and board of directors in the Asian countries would be largely
different from those in Western countries.