TY - JOUR
T1 - CEO Influence and Board Committee Structure
AU - Jung, Sun Moon
AU - Kim, Chongho
AU - Yeom, Jimin
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025, Korean Accounting Association. All rights reserved.
PY - 2025
Y1 - 2025
N2 - This study examines the relationship between CEO influence and the board's voluntary use of committees that are not required by regulations. To borrow a framework from the organizational decision-making literature, boards of directors are multi-agent multi-task systems. Without an explicit hierarchy to impose a committee structure on directors, boards are decentralized systems, which potentially leads to fewer board committees due to directors’ aversion to heightened accountability (i.e., free-riding). We posit that the CEO's influence in the board can be a centralizing force in this decision-making process, thus encouraging the board to have more committees because the CEO benefits from the enhancement of its effectiveness through non-required committees that likely play advisory roles. Consistent with this prediction, we find CEO/chair duality, a proxy for CEO influence, to be positively associated with the use of non-required committees. This finding is more pronounced among the firms with lower levels of excess CEO compensation, which supports CEO influence working as a stewardship mechanism. Overall, our findings contribute to the literature by suggesting a potential channel that reflects advantages of insider control, which is a perspective that regulators often neglect.
AB - This study examines the relationship between CEO influence and the board's voluntary use of committees that are not required by regulations. To borrow a framework from the organizational decision-making literature, boards of directors are multi-agent multi-task systems. Without an explicit hierarchy to impose a committee structure on directors, boards are decentralized systems, which potentially leads to fewer board committees due to directors’ aversion to heightened accountability (i.e., free-riding). We posit that the CEO's influence in the board can be a centralizing force in this decision-making process, thus encouraging the board to have more committees because the CEO benefits from the enhancement of its effectiveness through non-required committees that likely play advisory roles. Consistent with this prediction, we find CEO/chair duality, a proxy for CEO influence, to be positively associated with the use of non-required committees. This finding is more pronounced among the firms with lower levels of excess CEO compensation, which supports CEO influence working as a stewardship mechanism. Overall, our findings contribute to the literature by suggesting a potential channel that reflects advantages of insider control, which is a perspective that regulators often neglect.
KW - board committees
KW - board of directors
KW - centralized decision-making
KW - CEO duality
KW - multi-agent multi-task system
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105011181762
U2 - 10.24056/KAR.2025.06.004
DO - 10.24056/KAR.2025.06.004
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:105011181762
SN - 1229-3288
VL - 50
SP - 111
EP - 152
JO - Korean Accounting Review
JF - Korean Accounting Review
IS - 3
ER -