Speaker:
Renée Adams
University of Oxford
Discussant:
Jeffrey Gordon
Columbia Law School
Abstract
Paper Authors: Renée Adams, Vanitha Ragunathan, and Robert Tumarkin
Boards are working harder over time, but they may not be working better. Using a comprehensive sample of board data from 1996 to 2010, we document that a large proportion of board activity is carried out by committees. Pre-SOX, 36% of board activity takes place in committees. This increases to 47% post-SOX. Since board activity levels have risen substantially over time, this means more board activity is carried out in the absence of insiders. This change does not appear to be value-enhancing. Board committees are relatively understudied, but our results suggest that ignoring them leads to a very incomplete picture of board governance.