Authors
Belén Villalonga, María‐Andrea Trujillo, Alexander Guzmán, Neila Cáceres
Publication date
2019/6
Journal
Financial Management
Volume
48
Issue
2
Pages
537-573
Description
Using a large survey database on the corporate governance practices of privately held Colombian firms, we investigate why firms have boards, and how that choice and the balance of power among the board, controlling shareholders, and minority shareholders affect the trade‐offs between control, liquidity, and growth and, ultimately, firm performance. We find that the probability of having a board increases with the number of shareholders and in family firms. When the preferences of controlling and minority shareholders diverge, as with respect to capital structure and dividend policy, boards support controlling shareholders’ decisions, thereby exacerbating the agency conflict between the two groups of shareholders.
Total citations
201720182019202020212022202320241271091096
Scholar articles
B Villalonga, MA Trujillo, A Guzmán, N Cáceres - Financial Management, 2019
B Villalonga, MA Trujillo, A Guzmán, N Caceres - 2017