What Is Good Corporate Governance?
Good corporate governance refers to methods, laws and policies
that direct, control and administers important functions of a
corporation. Principal stakeholders and board of directors
within the corporation are the ones who manage the principal
corporation. Good corporate governance ensures the goals of the
management stays within the lines of agreement of the
stakeholders. Most people think there is no difference between
stakeholders and shareholders in a corporation however, there is
a difference and that is why it's important to manage things
correctly. While working toward maximizing shareholders value
and fairness, good corporate governance system ensures their
rights are protected at all times. Since Enron and WorldCom were
such failures for big business, corporate governance has
reinforced its protection considerably. Stakeholders and
shareholders alike are driven to improve corporate governance,
although some of these changes come from federal mandates. What
most stakeholders want is concise information with a clear and
feasible link to overall business strategy.
Corporate efficiency is shaped by good corporate governance and
strengthens employment stability, retirement security, and the
endowments of orphanages, hospitals and universities. Good
corporate governance structure specifies the distribution of
rights and responsibilities among different participants in the
corporation, such as, the board, managers, shareholders and
other stakeholders, and spells out the rules and procedures for
making decisions on corporate affairs. By doing this, it also
provides the structure through which the company objectives are
set, and the means of attaining those objectives and monitoring
performance. Good corporate governance is about promoting
corporate fairness, transparency and accountability.
Because there seems to be so many definitions about good
corporate governance I picked one definition and tried to
explain it to the best I can. Businesses need to be controlled
and directed, because most corporations are pretty large, good
corporate governance tells which groups of people are to do
what. Board managers, stakeholders, and shareholders each have a
say in the rules and procedures of the company. This gives
structure to the company and ensures each group is watching the
other to keep things in line and keeps everybody honest. This
also ensures the company will prosper because each group has to
maintain certain strength in order for everything to work like a
well oiled machine. If one group goes down, the other groups
help restore it back to running the way it's suppose to. If one
group fails then eventually all groups fail and then nobody
prospers.
Corporate governance is the system by which business
corporations are directed and controlled. The corporate
governance structure specifies the distribution of rights and
responsibilities among different participants in the
corporation, such as, the board, managers, shareholders and
other stakeholders, and spells out the rules and procedures for
making decisions on corporate affairs. By doing this, it also
provides the structure through which the company objectives are
set, and the means of attaining those objectives and monitoring
performance", OECD April 1999. OECD's definition is consistent
with the one presented by Cadbury [1992, page 15].