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Board Committees and Performance in Microfinance Institutions: Evidence from Ethiopia

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dc.creator Dato, Muluneh
dc.creator Mersland, Roy
dc.creator Mori, Neema
dc.date 2019-02-19T03:32:43Z
dc.date 2019-02-19T03:32:43Z
dc.date 2018
dc.date.accessioned 2021-05-07T11:55:01Z
dc.date.available 2021-05-07T11:55:01Z
dc.identifier Dato, M. H., Mersland, R., & Mori, N. (2018). Board committees and performance in microfinance institutions: Evidence from Ethiopia. International Journal of Emerging Markets, 13(2), 350-370. doi:doi:10.1108/IJoEM-08-2016-0216
dc.identifier http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11810/5075
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11810/5075
dc.description This paper empirically relates subordinate board structures with improved financial and social performance in microfinance institutions (MFIs). The research question is analyzed using a panel data from 23 microfinance institutions in Ethiopia over a period of 2006— 2011. Random effects panel data estimation is applied to analyze the link between board committees and MFI's performance. In MFIs with larger than average boards, the findings demonstrate significant ties between financial and outreach performance and how their boards are structured. The structure of board committees moderates the relation between board size and financial and outreach performance measures. Importantly, board committee benefits MFIs through better operational self-sufficiency, lower operating expenses, greater outreach to customers, and outreach to poorer customers using average loan size as our proxy. Practitioners within microfinance sector, and those operating in advisory and regulatory roles to the sector could benefit from the argument advanced in the paper in that normative recommendation to restructure boards or establish committees requires reevaluating the board characteristics vis-à-vis the optimal monitoring, controlling, and advising needs of the institution. Prior literature focuses on who sits on boards, how large are the boards, and how independent are they. This paper advances our understanding of the structure of board committees and how this may affect the performance of MFI. This approach provides better representation of director's role and is thereby a good test of board effectiveness.
dc.subject corporate governance
dc.subject board committees
dc.subject microfinance
dc.subject Africa
dc.subject Ethiopia
dc.title Board Committees and Performance in Microfinance Institutions: Evidence from Ethiopia
dc.type Journal Article, Peer Reviewed


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