Internal Control Mechanisms and Forced CEO Turnover: An Empirical Investigation

The dissertation empirically examines the efficacy of internal control mechanisms by analyzing 94 forced turnovers of chief executive officers (CEOs). It seeks to answer two primary questions: One, do governance-related characteristics influence the promptness with which poorly-performing CEOs are r...

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Main Author: Jagannathan, Murali
Other Authors: Finance
Format: Others
Published: Virginia Tech 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/30322
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-183513359611541/
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spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-303222020-09-29T05:35:29Z Internal Control Mechanisms and Forced CEO Turnover: An Empirical Investigation Jagannathan, Murali Finance Pinkerton, John M. Keown, Arthur J. Hansen, Robert S. Shome, Dilip K. Denis, Diane K. ownership boards of directors corporate governance firm performance compensation The dissertation empirically examines the efficacy of internal control mechanisms by analyzing 94 forced turnovers of chief executive officers (CEOs). It seeks to answer two primary questions: One, do governance-related characteristics influence the promptness with which poorly-performing CEOs are removed from office; and two, are removals of CEOs followed by changes in internal control mechanisms? The results suggest that poorly performing managers are removed more quickly in firms that have a larger percentage of independent outside directors on their board, that have higher equity ownership by the non-CEO directors and lower equity ownership by the CEO, and that separate the positions of CEO and chairperson. The results also suggest that the removal of the CEO provides both the opportunity and the incentive to alter internal governance systems. There is significant turnover of board members and the new boards generally have a higher fraction of independent outside directors and are more likely to separate the positions of CEO and chairperson. In addition, the sensitivity of CEO compensation to firm performance increases significantly following turnover. These post-turnover improvements in monitoring and incentive schemes are more significant in those firms that require a crisis in the product and/or capital market before they remove their CEOs. However, there is no evidence of short-term improvement in operating performance following changes in CEOs and governance systems. Overall, the results suggest that board and ownership characteristics do influence the effectiveness of internal monitoring systems and that CEO turnover is associated with broad changes in monitoring and incentive systems. Ph. D. 2014-03-14T20:21:23Z 2014-03-14T20:21:23Z 1996-02-23 1998-07-17 1996-02-23 1996-02-23 Dissertation etd-183513359611541 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/30322 http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-183513359611541/ murali.pdf In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ application/pdf Virginia Tech
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic ownership
boards of directors
corporate governance
firm performance
compensation
spellingShingle ownership
boards of directors
corporate governance
firm performance
compensation
Jagannathan, Murali
Internal Control Mechanisms and Forced CEO Turnover: An Empirical Investigation
description The dissertation empirically examines the efficacy of internal control mechanisms by analyzing 94 forced turnovers of chief executive officers (CEOs). It seeks to answer two primary questions: One, do governance-related characteristics influence the promptness with which poorly-performing CEOs are removed from office; and two, are removals of CEOs followed by changes in internal control mechanisms? The results suggest that poorly performing managers are removed more quickly in firms that have a larger percentage of independent outside directors on their board, that have higher equity ownership by the non-CEO directors and lower equity ownership by the CEO, and that separate the positions of CEO and chairperson. The results also suggest that the removal of the CEO provides both the opportunity and the incentive to alter internal governance systems. There is significant turnover of board members and the new boards generally have a higher fraction of independent outside directors and are more likely to separate the positions of CEO and chairperson. In addition, the sensitivity of CEO compensation to firm performance increases significantly following turnover. These post-turnover improvements in monitoring and incentive schemes are more significant in those firms that require a crisis in the product and/or capital market before they remove their CEOs. However, there is no evidence of short-term improvement in operating performance following changes in CEOs and governance systems. Overall, the results suggest that board and ownership characteristics do influence the effectiveness of internal monitoring systems and that CEO turnover is associated with broad changes in monitoring and incentive systems. === Ph. D.
author2 Finance
author_facet Finance
Jagannathan, Murali
author Jagannathan, Murali
author_sort Jagannathan, Murali
title Internal Control Mechanisms and Forced CEO Turnover: An Empirical Investigation
title_short Internal Control Mechanisms and Forced CEO Turnover: An Empirical Investigation
title_full Internal Control Mechanisms and Forced CEO Turnover: An Empirical Investigation
title_fullStr Internal Control Mechanisms and Forced CEO Turnover: An Empirical Investigation
title_full_unstemmed Internal Control Mechanisms and Forced CEO Turnover: An Empirical Investigation
title_sort internal control mechanisms and forced ceo turnover: an empirical investigation
publisher Virginia Tech
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/30322
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-183513359611541/
work_keys_str_mv AT jagannathanmurali internalcontrolmechanismsandforcedceoturnoveranempiricalinvestigation
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