Journal Article
Corporate Governance and Development

Published
2006-02-23
Journal
World Bank Research Observer 21(1):91-122Author(s)
Metadata
Abstract
The literature shows that good corporate governance generally pays for firms, for markets, and for countries. It is associated with a lower cost of capital, higher returns on equity, greater efficiency, and more favorable treatment of all stakeholders, although the direction of causality is not always clear. The law and finance literature has documented the important role of institutions aimed at contractual and legal enforcement, including corporate governance, across countries. Using firm level data, researchers have documented relationships between countries corporate governance frameworks on the one hand and performance, valuation, the cost of capital, and access to external financing on the other. Given the benefits of good corporate governance, firms and countries should voluntarily reform more. Resistance by entrenched owners and managers at the firm level and political economy factors at the level of markets and countries partly explain why they do not.Citation
“Claessens, Stijn. 2006. Corporate Governance and Development. Oxford University Press on behalf of the World Bank. © World Bank. https://openknowledge.worldbank.org/handle/10986/16395 License: CC BY-NC-ND 3.0 IGO.”
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