HCBE Faculty Articles
Ethics Programs, Board Involvement, and Potential Conflicts Of Interest In Corporate Governance
ORCID
Andrew J. Felo0000-0002-8144-4353
Document Type
Article
Publication Title
Journal of Business Ethics
ISSN
0167-4544
Publication Date
8-1-2001
Abstract/Excerpt
Board composition, insider participa tion on compensation committees, and director compensation practices can potentially cause conflicts of interest between directors and shareholders. If these corporate governance structures result in situations where actions beneficial to directors do not also benefit shareholders, then shareholders may suffer. Corporate ethics programs usually address conflicts of interest that may arise in the firm's activities. Some boards of directors take active roles in their firms' ethics programs by actively overseeing the programs. This paper empirically examines the relationship between ethics programs and potential conflicts of interest and the relationship between board involve ment in a firm's ethics program and potential conflicts of interest. Evidence in this paper shows that firms with ethics programs have a lower percentage of inside directors on their compensation committees than do firms without ethics programs. Firms in which boards are actively involved in the programs have more inde pendent boards (higher percentage of independent directors and lower percentage of inside directors) and are more likely to compensate outside directors with equity than are firms in which boards are not actively involved in the programs. Supplemental analyses show that the incidence of potential conflicts of interest is not significantly different between firms without ethics programs and firms in which boards are not actively involved in the programs. Taken together, the evidence in this paper indicates that a board actively involved in an ethics program, and not the simple Andrew J. Felo is Assistant Professor of Accounting in the Else School of Management at Millsaps College. His papers appear in Research on Accounting Ethics, Decision Support Systems, and Managerial Accounting. existence of an ethics program, is related to the incidence of potential conflicts of interest.
Volume
32
Issue
3
First Page
205
Last Page
218
NSUWorks Citation
Felo, Andrew J., "Ethics Programs, Board Involvement, and Potential Conflicts Of Interest In Corporate Governance" (2001). HCBE Faculty Articles. 576.
https://nsuworks.nova.edu/hcbe_facarticles/576