Are all private benefits of control ineffective?: principal‐principal benefits, external governance quality, and firm performance
Publication date
2019-06
Editors
Advisors
Supervisors
Document Type
Article
Metadata
Show full item recordCollections
License
taverne
Abstract
Private benefits of control (PBC) are benefits that controlling shareholders consume, but that are not shared with minority shareholders. Research focusing on the value protection role of corporate governance typically frames PBC as principal–principal (PP) agency costs, and interprets them as a form of minority shareholder expropriation that decreases firm performance. Taking a value creation perspective of corporate governance, however, we propose a more nuanced role for PBC. Specifically, we see them also as PP agency benefits that compensate controlling shareholders for their monitoring and advisory services, which can increase firm performance. Since both PP costs and benefits affect firm performance, we theorize that PBC enhance firm performance at a diminishing rate. Furthermore, we show that the effect of PBC on firm performance is more positive when country‐level external governance mechanisms are strong.
Keywords
control transactions, comparative corporate governance, controlling shareholders, institutions, firm performance, private benefits of control, Taverne, Star Journals
Citation
Sauerwald, S, Heugens, P P M A R, Turturea, R & van Essen, M 2019, 'Are all private benefits of control ineffective? principal‐principal benefits, external governance quality, and firm performance', Journal of Management Studies, vol. 56, no. 4, pp. 725-757. https://doi.org/10.1111/joms.12420