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REVIEWING THE REVIEWS: TOWARDS A ‘BUNDLES APPROACH’ TO CORPORATE GOVERNANCE INDICES. Gerhard Schnyder – King’s College London gerhard.schnyder@kcl.ac.uk October 12, 2012 LCCGE – Birkbeck , University of London. Motivation & Argument Reviewing the reviews The bundles approach to CG
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REVIEWING THE REVIEWS: TOWARDS A ‘BUNDLES APPROACH’ TO CORPORATE GOVERNANCEINDICES Gerhard Schnyder – King’s College London gerhard.schnyder@kcl.ac.uk October 12, 2012 LCCGE – Birkbeck, University of London
Motivation & Argument • Reviewing the reviews • The bundles approach to CG • Lessons from the bundles approach for CG index construction Plan
Several relatively recent studies closely look at existing academic and commercial ‘composite’ measures of CG • GMI, RiskMetrics/ISS CGQ, The Corporate Library, AGR • G-Index (Gompers et al. 2003), E-Index (Bebchuk et al. 2005), Gov-7 (Brown & Caylor 2006) • ‘Ranking the rankings’ Daineset al. 2010; Renders et al. 2010; Baghat et al. 2008; Bebchuck et al. 2005 • Reviewing the ‘reviews’ what are the criticisms of composite measures? • Reviewing the solutions what are the implications of the proposed solutions in particular for comparative studies and from a ‘bundles’ perspective? • Better solutions? Motivation & Argument
Findings: • Composite measures of CG are bad at predicting performance • Different measures do not correlate with each other (while claiming to measure the same underlying construct) So what’s wrong with the rankings? • Lack of theory behind index construction all CG mechanisms equal weighting? • Naivetyof academic ‘tick-and-sum’ and ‘kitchen-sink approaches’ to index construction (Bebchuk et al. 2005) • Non-transparentnature of algorithms used to compute commercial measures Reviewing the Reviews1
Findings: • Methodological problems rendering link CG – performance elusive: • Endogeneity problem: performance affects subsequent CG choices (well performing firms anticipate capital increases improve CG to maximise share price) • Selection bias: Most studies focus on largest firms = by definition also the best performing ones not representative sample of population + little variance statistical power weak(Renders et al. 2010) Note that this critique does not explain why findings are inconsistent across studies, given that they are all affected by the same selection bias • Reviewing the Reviews2
Solutions: • Use more sophisticated statistical methods to find correlation with performance State of the art: instrument variable approach & 2SLS instead of OLS; recursive partitioning etc • Use simpler measures of CG (since complex ones don’t work) Bebchuket al. 2005: E-Index (6 vars) based on G-Index (24 vars) Most contentious vars + the ones that correlate with performance! Bhagat et al. 2008: $-value of median independent director’s stockholdingspredicts performance better than any composite measure Reviewing the Reviews 3
Basic idea: CG mechanisms may not matter individually, but in combination with others • Rediker & Seth 1995 coined the term ‘bundles of CG mechanisms’ (bundles concept = well-developed in HRM) • Rediker & Seth 1995: Monitoring by outside directors, blockholder monitoring, managerial shareholdings, mutual monitoring by inside directors substitution effects: E.g. Companies with a large external blockholder use fewer incentives for managers than companies with dispersed ownership • Zajac & Westphal 1994: Companies with incentives structures have fewer other CG mechanisms in place • Yet, others find complementarities: Rutherford & Buchholtz 2007, Rutherford et al. (2007): BoD and incentive structures = complements: you need effective boards to make PFP schemes work…with weak boards, they become self-service shop for top execs The ‘Bundles Approach’
Bundles are contingent on… • …firm characteristics (Ward et al. 2009) and… • …on organisational environment (Filatochev 2007). Cf. Aguilera et al. 2008; 2012 etc. • Firm-level contingencies: • Ward et al. 2009 BoD monitoring & incentive pay: = substitutes in well-performing firms: BoDcan choose to monitor less by granting more incentive pay to executives = complementsin poorly performing firms: e.g. external institutional shareholder putting pressure on the BoD to align shareholder and management interests = ‘decoupled’ in companies on the verge of bankruptcy: BoDsmonitoring capacity declines, because non-executive directors leave and are not replaced and CEOs tend to entrench themselves bundles may ‘unbundle’in extreme situations The Contingency of Bundles
Better statistical methods • Using simpler measures Fundamental problem: Risk of tautology: single out variables that impact performance, define corporate governance in terms of these variables then investigate whether CG matters for performance! e.g. ISS weighting more those items that impact performance; Bebchuk et al. (2005) only include variables that impact peformance Reviewing the solutions in light of the bundles approach 1
Example: Aggarwal et al. (2009: 3133): “One can reasonably disagree both with the governance attributes ISS focuses on and with the index we compute. […] However, if the index were to convey no information, we would simply find that the index we use is not related to firm value” • The link between corporate governance and firm value is both the research question and the fundamental axiom • NB: maybe there is nothing wrong with the measures and what we find is proof that CG does not matter for performance! This is rarely acknowledged due to the strength of ‘agency theory’ and ‘efficient market hypothesis’ paradigm in financial economics Reviewing the solutions….2
Lack of rigour in index construction: Bebchuk et al. 2005: low correlations between items of the E-Index (between 0.1 and 0.31) Bebchuk et al.: Good thing, because each item adds a new dimension of CG = methodologically questionable (Cortina 1993) Risk of excessive information loss: Bundles: if a single CG mechanism does not affect performance, it may still do in combination with others this information is lost Comparisons: what matters in one country may not matter in another functional equivalents More sophisticated rather than simpler measures needed Reviewing the solutions….3
Kitchen-sink approach may be better than univariate measure Ashby’s ‘law of requisite variety’ v./ lexparsimoniae Index construction: • Inductive approach: Use cluster or factor analysis not regression on performance to figure out what matters • Mid-range theories based on comparative CG and CG systems literature what is the role of the BoD, transparency, etc. in different countries? • Laws on the book vs. laws in practice: degrees of implementation (symbolic implementation etc.) multi-level variables needed • Index of weakly-correlated variables? sub-indicators with strong correlations (modular approach) (cf. Myajima 2007) • Endogeneity problems of CG mechanisms: Distinguish choice variables v./ from ‘legally-imposed’ variables Lessons from the bundles approach
Too complex? Too ambitious? Not feasible? • Not everything can or should be quantified and we still need qualitative research • Yet, what is the alternative? • Contiuing use of G-index or E-index; of La Porta et al.’s legal index despite overwhelming evidence that these indices are limited in their validity, problematic in different respects, or plain wrong! • Quantitative research needs to be based on more robust measures • Make things as simply as possible, but not simpler complex empirical phenomena like CG require complex measures not simple ones! • More thought/research needs to go into developing indices that are useful for comparative bundles research Is this madness?