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Shareholder Voting and Corporate Governance Around the WorldPeter IlievPennsylvania State University - Department of Finance Karl V. LinsUniversity of Utah - Department of Finance Darius P. MillerSouthern Methodist University (SMU) - Edwin L. Cox School of Business Lukas RothUniversity of Alberta - Department of Finance and Statistical Analysis September 20, 2012 AFA 2012 Chicago Meetings Paper Abstract: There is significant debate as to whether the shareholder voting process is an effective way to exercise corporate governance. Using a sample of 7,975 companies across 42 countries, we investigate whether the votes cast by U.S. institutional investors for director elections, as well as subsequent director turnover, are consistent with an effective shareholder voting process. We find that shareholders vote against directors more often when country-level investor protection is low or firm-level managerial entrenchment is high, indicating that investors exercise dissent voting when they fear expropriation the most. Further, greater voting against directors is associated with greater director turnover, indicating that shareholder votes cast have a governance-related outcome. We conclude that shareholder voting is an effective channel through which corporate governance is exercised in firms across the world.
Number of Pages in PDF File: 42 Keywords: Corporate Governance, Voting, Insider Control, Shareholder Protection, Institutional Investors JEL Classification: D7, F30, G15, G32, G34, K22 working papers seriesDate posted: November 4, 2010 ; Last revised: January 27, 2013Suggested CitationContact Information
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