Board Compensation in Financial Sectors: A Systematic Review of Twenty-Four Years of Research
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- RQ 1. What is the state of the art of research on board compensations in financial institutions?
- RQ 2. What is the intellectual structure of research in this area (focus and criticisms)?
- RQ 3. What are the existing gaps and areas for future research in this area?
2. Board Compensation of Financial Institutions
3. Methodology
4. Results and Discussion
4.1. Yearly Trends
4.2. Research Settings of Prior Studies
4.3. Regional Analysis
4.4. Leading Research
4.5. The Use of Theories
4.5.1. Agency Theory
4.5.2. Multiple Theories-Based Studies
4.5.3. Single Theory-Based Studies
4.6. Thematical Analysis
4.6.1. Compensation and Firm Performance
4.6.2. Determinants of Board Compensation
4.6.3. Risk and Compensation
4.6.4. Earning Management and Compensation
4.6.5. Merge Banks and Compensation
4.6.6. Financial Crisis and Board Compensation
5. Future Research Agenda
6. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Row Labels | Count of Number | Percent from Total | Country Type | Count of Number | Percent from Total |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Australia | 3 | 3% | Developing countries | 10 | 18% |
Brazil | 1 | 1% | Developed countries | 48 | 12% |
China | 1 | 1% | |||
France | 1 | 1% | |||
India | 1 | 1% | |||
Indonesia | 1 | 1% | |||
Japan | 1 | 1% | |||
Malaysia | 1 | 1% | |||
Pakistan | 1 | 1% | |||
Poland | 1 | 1% | |||
Spain | 2 | 2% | |||
Switzerland | 1 | 1% | |||
UK | 2 | 2% | |||
USA | 41 | 48% | |||
Not applicable | 20 | 7% | |||
Cross country | 9 | 9% | |||
Grand Total | 87 | 100% | Grand Total | 58 | 100% |
Authors | Overview of the Research Findings | Cited by |
---|---|---|
Sanders and Carpenter (1998) | Results from a sample of large U.S. businesses indicate that a firm’s governance structure will manage the complexity arising from its degree of internationalization. Therefore, they recommend that organizations manage and adapt to the information-processing needs and agency concerns resulting from internationalization via the separation of the chair and CEO posts, bigger senior management teams, and higher, longer-term CEO compensation. | 623 |
Boyd (1994) | The research indicated that CEO compensation is greater in organizations with less control. However, there was no substantial correlation between CEO salary and business size or profitability. In addition, this research confirms the previous analysis defining the board as a crucial internal control mechanism and contradicts the assumption that the ratio of insiders is inversely correlated with remuneration. | 435 |
Conyon and Peck (1998) | The findings revealed that boardroom governance frameworks in the United Kingdom continued to change during the early 1990s. The modifications were substantially aligned with many of the reform advocates’ proposals for corporate governance. The econometric findings demonstrate a complicated link between management remuneration and internal corporate governance, indicating that boardroom control factors have little direct influence on the amount of management compensation. In addition, the research suggests that the membership of a company’s main board and its compensation committee have a significant role in aligning executive remuneration and corporate success. | 420 |
Ryan and Wiggins (2004) | The study concluded that independent directors have a negotiating advantage over the chief executive officer, which results in compensation that is more closely aligned with shareholder interests. When there are more outsiders on a company’s board, directors get more equity-based compensation. When the CEO’s influence over the board rises, remuneration creates fewer monitoring incentives. Companies with more inside directors and established CEOs employ equity-based compensation less often. Additionally, companies with established CEOs and CEOs who simultaneously serve as board chairs are less likely to substitute cash compensation with stock. | 287 |
Chhaochharia and Grinstein (2009) | Taking into consideration unobservable company effects, time-varying industry impacts, firm size, and performance, this analysis reveals a substantial fall in CEO remuneration for businesses that were more influenced by new board rules established by the main U.S. stock exchanges than less affected firms. The remuneration decline is most significant in the subgroup of impacted enterprises with no outside block-holders on the board and in those with a low concentration of institutional investors. The data implied that the new board requirements influenced CEO remuneration choices. | 250 |
Hallock (1997) | CEOs who head entangled businesses get much greater salaries. Also, entangled CEOs tend to run bigger organizations. After adjusting for company and CEO characteristics, the wage disparity has decreased considerably. However, when organizations that are interlocked owing to recorded commercial links are regarded as not interlocked, the measured return to interlock is as high as 17%. There is evidence that the return to interlock was greater in the 1970s than in the early 1990s. | 250 |
Laksmana (2008) | The findings demonstrated that there is some evidence that successful board and committee characteristics are associated with increased shareholder communication about board procedures. Based on the sample from 1993, this research revealed that boards with the authority to act independently of senior management provide more information. Furthermore, it was suggested that the impact of CEOs in the director selection process influences the efficacy of board decisions. It also emphasized that regular board meetings would enable the exchange of information among directors and that a sufficient board size would allow for a more equitable division of workload and committee assignments, resulting in more effective board decisions. | 185 |
Laux and Laux (2009) | Directors adapt their oversight efforts in reaction to a change in CEO incentives, indicating that an increase in CEO equity incentives does not necessarily enhance earnings management. Suppose the board’s duties for determining CEO remuneration and monitoring are divided via the establishment of committees. In that case, the compensation committee will raise the usage of stock-based CEO compensation, while the audit committee will bear the higher expense of supervision. This study’s model predicts relationships between earnings management, the quality of board monitoring, the pay-performance sensitivity of CEO remuneration, and board committee structure. | 144 |
Fahlenbrach (2009) | Previous allegations that entrenched managers create their own remuneration arrangements are inconsistent with the outcomes of a wide cross-section of large U.S. public companies. Governance substitution could explain the links between corporate governance structures, total pay-for-performance, and excess compensation. If a company has inadequate governance in general, the compensation contract helps align the interests of shareholders and the CEO. | 115 |
Kumar and Sivaramakrishnan (2008) | This study found that when board members grow less reliant on the CEO, their monitoring efficiency may drop, even while the incentive efficiency of executive compensation contracts increases. Consequently, a board consisting of more independent directors may perform poorly. Moreover, larger equity incentives for the board may raise equity-based compensation awards to management. | 114 |
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Khatib, S.F.A.; Al Amosh, H.; Ananzeh, H. Board Compensation in Financial Sectors: A Systematic Review of Twenty-Four Years of Research. Int. J. Financial Stud. 2023, 11, 92. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijfs11030092
Khatib SFA, Al Amosh H, Ananzeh H. Board Compensation in Financial Sectors: A Systematic Review of Twenty-Four Years of Research. International Journal of Financial Studies. 2023; 11(3):92. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijfs11030092
Chicago/Turabian StyleKhatib, Saleh F. A., Hamzeh Al Amosh, and Husam Ananzeh. 2023. "Board Compensation in Financial Sectors: A Systematic Review of Twenty-Four Years of Research" International Journal of Financial Studies 11, no. 3: 92. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijfs11030092
APA StyleKhatib, S. F. A., Al Amosh, H., & Ananzeh, H. (2023). Board Compensation in Financial Sectors: A Systematic Review of Twenty-Four Years of Research. International Journal of Financial Studies, 11(3), 92. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijfs11030092