Monitoring the Monitors: The Corporate Governance in Japanese Banks and Their Real Estate Lending in the 1980s
Journal of Business, 2006 (November), 79 (6), 3057-3081.
The corporate governance role of banks in ‘bank-centered’ countries like Japan has been well-studied. This paper studies the corporate governance in Japanese banks. It shows that large shareholders restrained bank managers from real estate lending in the 1980s. However, this effect was absent for the shareholders that belonged to the same keiretsu as the bank. Relationship banking and cross shareholding prevented these shareholders from disciplining the bank managers. In financial systems where banks play a large role in corporate governance, the more effective the banks are in monitoring other companies, the more difficult it may become to monitor bank managers.
(Click on the title to download the paper)
myExtraContent1
myExtraContent5
Summary
myExtraContent7
myExtraContent8
