Regulatory Pressure and Bank Directors' Incentives to Attend Board Meetings

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Thu, 08/22/2019 - 16:08
Year
2012
Country
United Kingdom
Language
English
Abstract

The primary way in which directors obtain necessary information is by attending board meetings. Bank directors, in particular, are strongly urged to attend meetings by regulators. We investigate whether such pressure is sufficient for bank directors to have good attendance records. Using data on whether directors were named in proxy statements as attending fewer meetings than they were supposed to, we find that (1) bank directors appear to have worse attendance records than their counterparts in nonfinancial firms, (2) their attendance behavior is related to explicit and implicit incentives for attendance, and (3) past attendance records are not related to the likelihood a director departs the board. Our results suggest that explicit and implicit incentives may provide important complements to regulatory pressure in influencing director behavior. © 2012 The Authors. International Review of Finance. © International Review of Finance Ltd. 2012.

English
ISSN/ISBN
1369412X
No. of Pages
227 - 248
Number
2
Volume
12
Select type of work
Name of the Journal
CIS Program Old
CIS publications
No
CIS Thesis
No