Outside Directors in the US are Inneffective, Studies Claim
According to a recent New York times article, researchers have found little evidence that companies improve their performance by raising the number of independent directors on their boards. In fact, some studies have found that they perform worse. The Sarbanes-Oxley Act in the US was the latest in a round of efforst (private and governmental) to impose stricter corporate governance on companies following the accounting scandals in the US. Proponents of stricter corporate governance have long pushed for more outside directors, on boards and on audit committees. But a study by Sanjai Bhagat, finance professor at the University of Colorado, and Bernard Black, professor at Stanford, found that in examining 1,000 US companies from the end of 1990 to 1993 that the companies who performed the worst were those whose boards had the greatest proportion of outside directors!
One of the most crucial factors, as pointed out by Paul Gompers, a professor at Harvard University, is its corporate culture--i.e., how the firm is by its corporate culture responsive to its shareholder concerns. His point is that, "until and unless boards become more active, board independence will continue to be a poor proxy for good corporate culture."
These studies are ironic, in that there has been increasing pressure for Japanese companies to adopt US-style corporate governance, with the number of outside directors on boards and in the audit committee as one key yardstick for progress in corporate governance in Japan. A total of 36 listed companies will adopt U.S.-style corporate governance by the end of June, following amendments to the Commercial Code that took effect in April, according to the Nihon Keizai. Companies that adopt the system will set up three committees -- one to conduct audits, one to nominate board members, and one to set executive pay. Many of the companies adopting the new format have done so apparently to improve their corporate image in the eyes of overseas investors. Many Japanese firms are also embracing US-style corporate governance because they have come under the wing of foreign companies.
(
TT's Take) However, some of Japan's most admired companies, such as Toyota and Canon, have given it quite a lot of thought, and have realized that introducing US-style corporate governance without integrating the principals behind such actions (such as active boards) or without changing the corporate culture as regards corporate governance and attention to shareholder interests is like importing a left-hand drive 1960s Cadillac to drive on Tokyo's narrow roads--i.e., only useful for appearance sake.
The other "buzz word" these days is
Corporate Social Responsibility and
Socially Responsible Investment. Numerous organizations have popped up overseas and in Japan to measure and rate companies in terms of CSR, and to create "sustainability" indices. Yet Deloitte Consulting, one of those management consultants responsible for a lot of important-sounding corporate buzzwords, has now come up with a piece of software called "Bullfighter" that identifies such jargon in documents and helps decipher what the companies are actually saying, and to help companies weed out the buzzword "BS" from their documents.
Yet there is Nikkei Business in their June 16 issue helping to propagate more "BS" by explaining what CSR is and implying that it is a new way for corporations to define "value". Such publications do a disservice to Japanese companies because they merely pick up on a trend or buzzword, listen to the pitch by proponents of such a trend or buzzword, and publish this as "gospel" to their Japanese corporate readers. Of course, any Japanese manager worth his salt would take such articles with, you guessed it, a large grain of salt. Moreover, he would intrinsically understand that corporate responsiblity is good business, but only if it comes on top of sustainable sales and profitability–profitability sufficient to satisfy all stakeholders in the firm, including the employees. Indeed, companies whose business model is broken and who have lost their value-added in the market place have much bigger fish to fry than CSR--how about surviving.
Among the firms that are embracing the U.S. style, five companies, including Hoya Corp. (7741), Seiyu and Resona Holdings Inc. (8308), have more outside directors than insiders, and five other firms have the same number of inside and outside directors. At 26 companies, insiders outnumber outsiders. In the U.S., many companies have boards with a majority of outside members.
Japan Telecom boasts the highest number of outside directors at nine, followed by Sony at eight and Seiyu at seven.