We find that shareholder-friendly corporate governance is associated with higher stand-alone and systemic risk in the banking sector. Specifically, shareholder-friendly corporate governance results in higher risk for larger banks and for banks that are located in countries with generous financial safety nets as banks try to shift risk toward taxpayers. We confirm our findings by comparing banks to nonfinancial firms and examining changes in bank risk around an exogenous regulatory change in governance. Our results underline the importance of the financial safety net and too-big-to-fail guarantees in thinking about corporate governance reforms at banks
We investigate whether shareholder-friendliness of corporate governance mechanisms is related to the...
In the lead up to the banking crisis of 2007–2008, U.S. banks engaged in systemic, excessive risk-ta...
The present study uses a sample of up to 356 banks from 50 countries over the period 2002–2017 to ex...
Research Question/Issue Bank governance has become the focus of a flurry of recent research and hea...
This paper finds that shareholder-friendly corporate governance is positively associated with bank i...
Research Question/Issue: Bank governance has become the focus of a flurry of recent research and hea...
The effectiveness of the management team, ownership structure and other corporate governance systems...
This review surveys the literature on the corporate governance of banks. Traditional corporate gover...
We provide new evidence that the systemic risk of large banks is higher when the external and intern...
Banks differ from non-financial firms. These differences affect the manner of agency conflicts betwe...
This paper reviews the pattern of bank failures during the financial crisis and asks whether there w...
The thesis aims to contribute to the literature on bank governance by examining the influence of boa...
Corporate governance is viewed as an important, essential, and most significant factor for well-func...
This thesis investigates the role of corporate governance in US bank holding companies between 1998 ...
This paper aims to review the existing theoretical and empirical literature on the relationship betw...
We investigate whether shareholder-friendliness of corporate governance mechanisms is related to the...
In the lead up to the banking crisis of 2007–2008, U.S. banks engaged in systemic, excessive risk-ta...
The present study uses a sample of up to 356 banks from 50 countries over the period 2002–2017 to ex...
Research Question/Issue Bank governance has become the focus of a flurry of recent research and hea...
This paper finds that shareholder-friendly corporate governance is positively associated with bank i...
Research Question/Issue: Bank governance has become the focus of a flurry of recent research and hea...
The effectiveness of the management team, ownership structure and other corporate governance systems...
This review surveys the literature on the corporate governance of banks. Traditional corporate gover...
We provide new evidence that the systemic risk of large banks is higher when the external and intern...
Banks differ from non-financial firms. These differences affect the manner of agency conflicts betwe...
This paper reviews the pattern of bank failures during the financial crisis and asks whether there w...
The thesis aims to contribute to the literature on bank governance by examining the influence of boa...
Corporate governance is viewed as an important, essential, and most significant factor for well-func...
This thesis investigates the role of corporate governance in US bank holding companies between 1998 ...
This paper aims to review the existing theoretical and empirical literature on the relationship betw...
We investigate whether shareholder-friendliness of corporate governance mechanisms is related to the...
In the lead up to the banking crisis of 2007–2008, U.S. banks engaged in systemic, excessive risk-ta...
The present study uses a sample of up to 356 banks from 50 countries over the period 2002–2017 to ex...