Corporate Governance and Efficiency: Evidence From U.S. Property–Liability Insurance Industry

Corporate Governance and Efficiency: Evidence From U.S. Property–Liability Insurance Industry

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Article ID: iaor201112124
Volume: 78
Issue: 3
Start Page Number: 519
End Page Number: 550
Publication Date: Sep 2011
Journal: Journal of Risk and Insurance
Authors: , , ,
Keywords: insurance
Abstract:

This study examines the relation between corporate governance and the efficiency of the U.S. property–liability insurance industry during the period from 2000 to 2007. We find a significant relation between efficiency and corporate governance (board size, proportion of independent directors on the audit committee, proportion of financial experts on the audit committee, director tenure, proportion of block shareholding, average number of directorships, proportion of insiders on the board, and auditor dependence). We also find property–liability insurers have complied with the Sarbanes‐Oxley Act (SOX) to a large extent. Although SOX achieved the goal of greater auditor independence and might have prevented Enron‐like scandals, it had some unexpected effects. For example, insurers became less efficient when they had more independent auditors because the insurers were unable to recoup the benefits of auditor independence.

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