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McIntire Professor David C. Smith Awarded Grant from
Norwegian Research Council
Smith and Colleague to Study “Corporate Governance in
a Free Contracting Environment”
Dec. 12, 2007—What would corporate governance structures look like in
the absence of statutory law and regulation? Moreover, when laws or
regulations are first introduced, what are the effects? How is firm
performance altered? Do well-meaning regulations actually reduce fraud
and mismanagement and help protect investors, or do they simply create
onerous and expensive compliance requirements?
These are some of the questions that McIntire Professor of Finance David
C. Smith, along with Charlotte Ostergaard of the Norwegian School of
Management (BI) and the Central Bank of Norway, will be investigating
over the course of the next three years. Notably, Smith and Ostergaard
were recently awarded some $60,000 in annual research funding by the
Norwegian Research Council to do so.
But what does Norway have to do with any of this? The answer is that
until 1910, Norwegian businesses—in sharp contrast to those in virtually
every other industrialized nation—operated in an environment of
near-complete contracting freedom, devoid of corporate law. Looking at
corporate governance structures in Norway prior to 1910, then, affords
Smith and Ostergaard the opportunity to look at a set of circumstances
that, in America and Western Europe, are strictly theoretical. “It’s
really more like being an archaeologist,” Smith says.
Smith says that his study will help to increase our understanding of
corporate governance today in two important ways. First, he says, “we
can study the effectiveness of company-level corporate governance—for
instance, the impact of different board structures on firm
behavior—without the interference of federal and state regulations.”
Second, he says, “by studying how our sample firms respond to Norway’s
first corporate law in 1910, we obtain a clean test of the effects of
regulation on corporate performance.”
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