TRANSACTION COST THEORY CG
TRANSACTION COST THEORY CG
TRANSACTION COST THEORY CG
In Summary:
External Mechanism
External control mechanisms are controlled by those
outside an organization and serve the objectives of entities
such as regulators, governments, trade unions and
financial institutions. These objectives include adequate
debt management and legal compliance. External
mechanisms are often imposed on organizations by
external stakeholders in the forms of union contracts or
regulatory guidelines. External organizations, such as
industry associations, may suggest guidelines for best
practices, and businesses can choose to follow these
guidelines or ignore them. Typically, companies report
the status and compliance of external corporate
governance mechanisms to external stakeholders.
Regulatory Mechanisms of corporate governance
in India
A natural question to ask, given the theory behind
corporate governance, is why do we need to
impose particular governance regulations through
stock exchanges, legislatures, courts or supervisory
authorities? If it is in the interest of firms to provide
adequate protection to shareholders, why mandate
rules, which may be counterproductive? Even with
the best intentions regulators may not have all the
information available to design efficient rules.
Worse still, there is a danger that regulators can be
captured by a given constituency and impose rules
favoring one group over another.
In our country, there are some major mechanisms
to ensure corporate governance:
A) Companies Act : Companies in our country are
regulated by the companies Act, 1956, as amended
up to date and replaced by companies act 2013. The
companies Act is one of the biggest legislations with
470 sections and 7 schedules. The arms of the Act
are quite long and touch every aspect of a
company's insistence. But to ensure corporate
governance, the Act confers legal rights to
shareholders to
Vote on every resolution placed before an
annual general meeting;
To elect directors who are responsible for
specifying objectives and laying down policies;
Determine remuneration of directors and the
CEO;
Removal of directors and
Take active part in the annual general meetings.
B) Securities law
The primary securities law in our country is the SEBI
Act. Since its setting up in 1992, the board has taken
a number of initiatives towards investor protection.
One such initiative is to mandate information
disclosure both in prospectus and in annual
accounts. While the companies Act itself mandates
certain standards of information disclosure, SEBI Act
has added' substantially to these requirements in an
attempt to make these documents more
meaningful. The main objective of SEBI regulation is
shareholder value maximization by putting
corporate governance structures in place and
through the reduction of information asymmetry
between the managers and the investors of the
company.