Development of Corporate Governance Regulations: The Case of an Emerging Economy
Source
Journal of Business Ethics
Publisher
Springer Netherlands
Publication date
April 2009
Type
Academic Articles
Category
Corporate Governance/Accountability
Responsible Business in Emerging Markets
Responsible Business in Emerging Markets
Discipline
Micro/Macro/International Economics
Language
English
Free/Pay for content
Pay-for-content
This paper investigates the development of corporate governance
regulations in emerging economies, using the case of Bangladesh. In
particular, the paper considers three issues: What type of corporate
governance model may be suitable for an emerging economy such as
Bangladesh? What type of model has Bangladesh adopted in reality? and
What has prompted such adoption? By analysing the corporate environment
and corporate governance regulations, the paper finds that, like many
other developing nations, Bangladesh has also adopted the
Anglo-American shareholder model of corporate governance. Analysis of
behaviours of principal actors in the Bangladeshi corporate governance
scenario, using new institutionalism as a theoretical foundation, then
reveals that such adoption may be prompted by exposure to legitimacy
threats rather than efficiency reasons.
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