BA Theories (Business Administration & Management)

Corporate Governance: Theories, Definition, Examples

Ethics - theories

Corporate governance is important to maintain the stability and integrity of companies as it promotes trust in the business environment. Studies suggest that there is a positive relationship between Corporate Governance and shareholders value.

Investing is risky but information and warning signals need to be given with integrity, which was missing in the past financial scandals e.g. Maxwell, BCCI, Enron.

Corporate governance is getting increased attention from all quarters, and several countries have passed legislations for regulating corporate governance.

For example, America has passed Sarbanes-Oxley Act for regulating corporate governance due to governance failure. There are laws in various countries that require quota for female directors.

Corporate governance is the set of practices and rules by which a company is directed and controlled.

The primary objectives are to ensure transparency, accountability, and responsibility so that the interests of various stakeholders such as shareholders, management, customers, suppliers, financiers, government, and the community, are balanced.

The concept of transparency means accountability and explanation to outsiders of the workings of a firm (W. Scarff’s definition).

Read: More Business ethics and Responsibility Topics

Developments in corporate governance:

However, the ground reality is that there’s little change but many reports.

Fisher and Lovell (2006, p.307) offers an expanded definition of corporate governance.

King 2002 – companies should no longer act independently of the societies and environment in which they operate:

Spiritual collectiveness, Humility and helpfulness, Fairness to all human beings, High standards of morality based on close kinship clans etc., Corporate governance is about leadership.

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