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Title: Comments on Chhaochharia


1
Comments onChhaochharia LaevenCorporate
Governance Norms and Practices
  • Prof. Bernard Black
  • University of Texas
  • Law School McCombs School of Business
  • Istanbul Emerging Markets Conf, Nov. 2007

2
Three groups of governance studies
  • Broad, shallow cross-country studies
  • Narrow, deep country studies
  • Endogeneity skeptics
  • This paper is in the first group, which is fine
  • It slights the other two, which I think is not

3
Cross-country studies (which I don't do)
  • Limited set of indices
  • CLSA (2001, not repeated, partly subjective
    index)
  • Klapper Love (2004)
  • Mitton (2004)
  • SP (2002, not repeated)
  • Durnev Kim (2005)
  • Doidge, Karolyi Stulz (2007)
  • Alliance Bernstein (partly subjective index, no
    details)
  • Baker, Godridge, Gottesman Morey (2007)
  • ISS (2003-2005, developed markets)
  • Aggarwal, Erel, Stulz Williamson (2006)
  • Bruno Claessens (2007)
  • Durnev Fauver (2007)
  • this paper (Chhaochharia Laeven, 2007)

4
Country studies (the stuff I do)
  • Published studies on
  • Brazil (Leal and Carvalhal-da-Silva, 2007)
  • Germany (Drobetz, Schillhofer and Zimmerman
    (2004)
  • Hong Kong (Cheung, Connelly, Limpaphayom and
    Zhou, 2007a)
  • Korea (Black, Jang and Kim, 2006a, 2006b)
  • Russia (Black, 2001 Black, Love and Rachinsky,
    2006)
  • Switzerland (Beiner, Drobetz, Schmid and
    Zimmermann, 2006)
  • Turkey (Orbay Yurtoglu, 2006)
  • Also working papers on
  • China (Cheung et al., 2007b)
  • India (Balasubramanian, Black Khanna, 2007)
  • Japan (Aman Nguyen, 2007)
  • Ukraine (Zheka, 2007).

5
Endogeneity skeptics
  • Need to rule out
  • reverse causation
  • omitted variables
  • optimal differences
  • Some recent skeptical views
  • Hermalin Weisbach (2003), Board of Directors as
    an Endogenously Determined Institution
  • Chidambaran, Palia Zheng (2006), Does Better
    Corporate Governance Cause Better Firm
    Performance?
  • Lehn, Patro Zhao (2006), Governance Indices and
    Valuation Which Causes Which? (2006)
  • Listokin (2007), Interpreting Empirical Estimates
    of the Effect of Corporate Governance (2007)
  • Wintoki, Linck Netter (2007), Endogeneity and
    the Dynamics of Corporate Governance

6
Why does this matter?
  • Nice to have a new data set, even if for limited
    set of countries
  • But . . .
  • Literature review focuses on cross-country papers
  • Cites almost none of the second group
  • Cites none of the third group
  • Why does this matter?
  • Guide to what matters in corporate governance
  • How you build your index
  • Guide to robustness checks
  • Tobin's q vs. market/book
  • effect of outliers
  • Demirguc-Kunt-Maksimovic vs. Rajan-Zingales
    measure of financing constraints
  • different ADR levels
  • How to study individual elements

7
Black, Kim, Jang Park (2006)
Lesson 1 Aspects of governance matter Lesson 2
When study one aspect, control for others Lesson
3 Firm fixed effects vs. OLS
8
Black, Love Rachinsky (2006)
Lesson 1 Not all indices are created
equal. Lesson 2 Firm fixed effects vs. OLS
Can be very different
9
Black, Jang Kim (2006)
  • Lesson 1 Coefficients change if control for
    rest of governance
  • Lesson 2 Some results survive, but many don't
  • Not just higher standard errors due to
    colinearity

10
Country Fixed Effects
  • How different than competing papers?
  • Aggarwal et al., Bruno Claessens, Durnev
    Fauver use same data set, total variation
  • This paper variation above country minimum
  • Why is variation above minimum different than
    total variation, with country fixed effects.
  • Aggarwal et al use country fixed effects
  • Bruno Claessens don't but should
  • Authors say country fixed effects don't allow
    for variation in country minimum across time.
  • But how large is this variation? (I bet it is
    small.)
  • Similar results for total variation with country
    fixed effects? (I bet they are.).

11
Firm fixed effects next level down
  • Good instruments for governance are hard to find
  • I know of no good ones in cross country work
  • Legal origin as country level instrument . . .
    doesn't predict only governance
  • I like your instrument for Tobin's q, which you
    use to address reverse causation (oil
    priceindustry price sensitivity)
  • Without good instruments, we need firm fixed
    effects
  • not perfect, but better than OLS
  • In five years, you will be able to do this
  • your results will survive or not (I'm agnostic)
  • Meanwhile, want to see more on the next level
    down
  • groups of similar elements
  • individual elements

12
More CG Isn't Always Good
  • One can read this paper and never get a clue that
    more CG isn't always good
  • Yet most evidence on reaction to SOX by investors
    and cross-listed firms is negative
  • U.S. (Zhang, 2008)
  • cross-listed firms (Litvak, 2007 others)
  • delisting studies
  • So, SOX raises US minimum score from 1 to 3, and
    that is apparently bad!
  • Canada has min score of 0 U.S. used to have 1
  • What then to make of your governance index?
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