Sustainability and Corporate Governance: Transparency and Excessive Directors’ Remuneration in Listed Companies during the Global Financial Crisis

This article empirically examines the connection between the board of directors’ characteristics and excesses in remuneration for directors from a sustainability perspective, highlighting the role of information transparency on remuneration control. Using data from 73 listed companies in t...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Elena Merino, Montserrat Manzaneque-Lizano, Jesus Sanchez-Araque
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2019-12-01
Series:Sustainability
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/12/1/158
id doaj-9d7c86c38d1f43e886fd690aad15e2a2
record_format Article
spelling doaj-9d7c86c38d1f43e886fd690aad15e2a22020-11-25T00:34:40ZengMDPI AGSustainability2071-10502019-12-0112115810.3390/su12010158su12010158Sustainability and Corporate Governance: Transparency and Excessive Directors’ Remuneration in Listed Companies during the Global Financial CrisisElena Merino0Montserrat Manzaneque-Lizano1Jesus Sanchez-Araque2Department of Business Administration, Faculty of Law and Social Science, University of Castilla-La Mancha, 13071 Ciudad Real, SpainDepartment of Business Administration, Faculty of Social Science, University of Castilla-La Mancha, 16071 Cuenca, SpainDepartament of Business Administration, Faculty of Legal and Social Science, University of Castilla-La Mancha, 47051 Toledo, SpainThis article empirically examines the connection between the board of directors’ characteristics and excesses in remuneration for directors from a sustainability perspective, highlighting the role of information transparency on remuneration control. Using data from 73 listed companies in the period 2007−2012 (the global financial crisis), we find that (1) board size presents a non-linear relationship with excessive total directors’ remuneration during the crisis period; (2) other board characteristics (board independence, duality and directors’ ownership) do not show a significant relationship with excessive directors´ remuneration; and (3) voluntary transparency on directors’ remuneration significantly contributes to controlling excessive total directors’ remuneration, which contributes to the long-term sustainability of the firm. The results of this study provide good reasons to take into account the effect of corporate governance characteristics and transparency on the remuneration excesses committed during the global financial crisis.https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/12/1/158sustainabilitycorporate governancedirectors’ remunerationvoluntary disclosure indexfinancial crisisboard of directors
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Elena Merino
Montserrat Manzaneque-Lizano
Jesus Sanchez-Araque
spellingShingle Elena Merino
Montserrat Manzaneque-Lizano
Jesus Sanchez-Araque
Sustainability and Corporate Governance: Transparency and Excessive Directors’ Remuneration in Listed Companies during the Global Financial Crisis
Sustainability
sustainability
corporate governance
directors’ remuneration
voluntary disclosure index
financial crisis
board of directors
author_facet Elena Merino
Montserrat Manzaneque-Lizano
Jesus Sanchez-Araque
author_sort Elena Merino
title Sustainability and Corporate Governance: Transparency and Excessive Directors’ Remuneration in Listed Companies during the Global Financial Crisis
title_short Sustainability and Corporate Governance: Transparency and Excessive Directors’ Remuneration in Listed Companies during the Global Financial Crisis
title_full Sustainability and Corporate Governance: Transparency and Excessive Directors’ Remuneration in Listed Companies during the Global Financial Crisis
title_fullStr Sustainability and Corporate Governance: Transparency and Excessive Directors’ Remuneration in Listed Companies during the Global Financial Crisis
title_full_unstemmed Sustainability and Corporate Governance: Transparency and Excessive Directors’ Remuneration in Listed Companies during the Global Financial Crisis
title_sort sustainability and corporate governance: transparency and excessive directors’ remuneration in listed companies during the global financial crisis
publisher MDPI AG
series Sustainability
issn 2071-1050
publishDate 2019-12-01
description This article empirically examines the connection between the board of directors’ characteristics and excesses in remuneration for directors from a sustainability perspective, highlighting the role of information transparency on remuneration control. Using data from 73 listed companies in the period 2007−2012 (the global financial crisis), we find that (1) board size presents a non-linear relationship with excessive total directors’ remuneration during the crisis period; (2) other board characteristics (board independence, duality and directors’ ownership) do not show a significant relationship with excessive directors´ remuneration; and (3) voluntary transparency on directors’ remuneration significantly contributes to controlling excessive total directors’ remuneration, which contributes to the long-term sustainability of the firm. The results of this study provide good reasons to take into account the effect of corporate governance characteristics and transparency on the remuneration excesses committed during the global financial crisis.
topic sustainability
corporate governance
directors’ remuneration
voluntary disclosure index
financial crisis
board of directors
url https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/12/1/158
work_keys_str_mv AT elenamerino sustainabilityandcorporategovernancetransparencyandexcessivedirectorsremunerationinlistedcompaniesduringtheglobalfinancialcrisis
AT montserratmanzanequelizano sustainabilityandcorporategovernancetransparencyandexcessivedirectorsremunerationinlistedcompaniesduringtheglobalfinancialcrisis
AT jesussanchezaraque sustainabilityandcorporategovernancetransparencyandexcessivedirectorsremunerationinlistedcompaniesduringtheglobalfinancialcrisis
_version_ 1725312260689100800