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Corporate Governance Myths: Comments on Armstrong, Guay, and WeberJames A. BrickleySimon Graduate School of Business, University of Rochester Jerold L. ZimmermanUniversity of Rochester - Simon School of Business September 1, 2010 Simon School Working Paper No. FR 10-29 Abstract: This paper argues that academics, politicians, and the media have six commonly held but misguided beliefs about corporate governance. While Armstrong, Guay, and Weber (2010) discuss some of these misconceptions, a wider recognition that these beliefs are actually “myths” is important. They include: (1) a common definition of “corporate governance” exists; (2) a useful distinction is “internal” versus “external” governance mechanisms; (3) outside directors perform two separable roles: to advise and monitor managers; (4) research has identified “good” and “bad” governance practices; (5) a “good” governance index can be constructed; and (6) corporate governance “best practices” can be deduced from peer data.
Number of Pages in PDF File: 28 Keywords: corporate governance, financial accounting, agency costs, contracting, debt contracts JEL Classification: D21, D23, J33, K22, L14, L20, M40, M41 working papers seriesDate posted: September 23, 2010Suggested CitationContact Information
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