Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
960327 | Journal of Financial Economics | 2012 | 24 Pages |
Outside directors and audit committees are widely considered to be central elements of good corporate governance. We use a 1999 Korean law as an exogenous shock to assess whether and how board structure affects firm market value. The law mandates 50% outside directors and an audit committee for large public firms, but not smaller firms. We study this shock using event study, difference-in-differences, and instrumental variable methods, within an overall regression discontinuity approach. The legal shock produces economically large share price increases for large firms, relative to mid-sized firms; their share prices jump in 1999 when the reforms are announced.
► Korea's 1999 board reforms predict higher firm market value. ► We find evidence of a causal effect using multiple causal inference strategies. ► Both 50% outside directors and audit committees predict higher value.