logo
To motivate independent directors, put them in the spotlight

To motivate independent directors, put them in the spotlight

[The content of this article has been produced by our advertising partner.]
Advertisement
Many countries require listed companies to have independent directors sitting on their boards. These directors have no ties to the company, are not on the executive team, and do not participate in daily operations, ensuring ethical and effective management while balancing stakeholder interests. Unfortunately, it is not uncommon for these overseers to be besieged by multiple issues that prevent them from performing their roles.
Among many possible reasons, controlling shareholders often immensely influence the nomination of independent directors, who receive meagre compensations, giving them less motivation to exert monitoring efforts. A lack of expertise could also be the cause, as many independent directors are industry outsiders with little business experience. Regardless, their oversight function is vital in ensuring corporate governance.
George Yang, Professor of the School of Accountancy at the Chinese University of Hong Kong (CUHK) Business School, tries to address this issue. He investigates the effect of China's 'sunshine enforcement', where the regulators use public enforcement mechanisms to encourage independent directors to step up their game. The concept is based on increasing transparency and public visibility in enforcing laws to improve accountability and compliance.
In a study titled Public enforcement through independent directors, Professor Yang and his co-authors, Li Xiaoxi and Rao Pingui of Jinan University, as well as Yue Heng of Singapore Management University, examined the role of independent directors in responding to a comment letter, a publicly shared inquiry from regulators regarding companies' filings, disclosures, or compliance with regulations. Specifically, the researchers look into certain transactions between companies and parties with pre-existing relationships. Such transactions, known as related-party transactions, are particularly concerning in emerging markets like China as they can lead to expropriation, an unfair practice where controlling shareholders take advantage of their position to benefit themselves at the expense of minority shareholders.
Advertisement
'Using data from China, we find that firms receiving comment letters concerning related-party transactions from stock exchanges significantly reduce their related-party transactions in subsequent years,' says Professor Yang. 'Managers, including independent directors, particularly care about their 'face'. They would be ashamed if they received sanctions from the market regulators, which would result if the issues in the comment letters were not properly resolved.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Taobao's daily on-demand orders soar as China's instant e-commerce war heats up
Taobao's daily on-demand orders soar as China's instant e-commerce war heats up

South China Morning Post

time42 minutes ago

  • South China Morning Post

Taobao's daily on-demand orders soar as China's instant e-commerce war heats up

The Taobao figures were released a day after rival Meituan reported record orders for its instant delivery service Alibaba Group Holding is seeing a rapid acceleration in the volume of on-demand delivery transactions, the latest sign of growing rivalry with Meituan and in China's instant e-commerce market. Combined daily orders on Taobao Instant Commerce – the company's latest push into on-demand delivery – and food delivery app reached 80 million, Taobao said on its official WeChat account on Monday. Daily active users on Taobao Instant Commerce surpassed 200 million. Alibaba owns the South China Morning Post. The figures were released a day after Meituan, Alibaba's bigger rival in the on-demand delivery sector, announced it had achieved record orders for its instant delivery service. On Saturday, Meituan said daily transaction volume covering food and retail goods had reached an all-time high of 120 million, briefly crashing its servers in certain areas. The Alibaba figures reflect the rapid progress achieved by Taobao Instant Commerce, which was launched in late April as the company's answer to Meituan's Instashopping and food delivery service. The service reached 10 million daily orders within its first week and 40 million within the first month. A group of Meituan food delivery couriers wait for new orders on March 22, 2025 in Chongqing, China. Transaction volumes have accelerated over the past few weeks as e-commerce players started to offer more discounts and subsidies to boost consumption during the peak summer season. It took the platform nearly a month to grow daily orders from 40 million to 60 million, but just 12 days to gain another 20 million. Alibaba, which is seeking new growth beyond its traditional e-commerce business, has been betting big on on-demand delivery. It just announced a consumer and merchant subsidy programme totalling 50 billion yuan (US$7 billion) that will run over the next 12 months. Newsletter Saturday China Future Tech By submitting, you consent to receiving marketing emails from SCMP. If you don't want these, tick here {{message}} Thanks for signing up for our newsletter! Please check your email to confirm your subscription. Follow us on Facebook to get our latest news. Last month, it announced the merger of and its online travel agency Fliggy into its core e-commerce operations, describing the move as a 'strategic upgrade from an e-commerce platform to a comprehensive consumer platform'. 'Synergies between food delivery, instant commerce and traditional commerce are [the] next focus,' Jefferies analysts said in a research note on Sunday about Alibaba's latest order figures. Alibaba reiterated that its strategy was to avoid 'involution', referring to increasingly intense competition that leads to diminishing returns, a phenomenon seen across various parts of Chinese society in recent years, raising concerns from the central government. The rapid growth of Taobao Instant Commerce has elevated the market size of China's instant delivery sector, boosting the total daily order volume across different platforms from around 100 million in May to 200 million, Alibaba said.

Taobao's daily on-demand orders soar as China's instant e-commerce war heats up
Taobao's daily on-demand orders soar as China's instant e-commerce war heats up

South China Morning Post

time2 hours ago

  • South China Morning Post

Taobao's daily on-demand orders soar as China's instant e-commerce war heats up

Alibaba Group Holding is seeing a rapid acceleration in the volume of on-demand delivery transactions, the latest sign of growing rivalry with Meituan and in China's instant e-commerce market. Combined daily orders on Taobao Instant Commerce – the company's latest push into on-demand delivery – and food delivery app reached 80 million, Taobao said on its official WeChat account on Monday. Daily active users on Taobao Instant Commerce surpassed 200 million. Alibaba owns the South China Morning Post. The figures were released a day after Meituan, Alibaba's bigger rival in the on-demand delivery sector, announced it had achieved record orders for its instant delivery service. On Saturday, Meituan said daily transaction volume covering food and retail goods had reached an all-time high of 120 million, briefly crashing its servers in certain areas. The Alibaba figures reflect the rapid progress achieved by Taobao Instant Commerce, which was launched in late April as the company's answer to Meituan's Instashopping and food delivery service. The service reached 10 million daily orders within its first week and 40 million within the first month. A group of Meituan food delivery couriers wait for new orders on March 22, 2025 in Chongqing, China. Transaction volumes have accelerated over the past few weeks as e-commerce players started to offer more discounts and subsidies to boost consumption during the peak summer season. It took the platform nearly a month to grow daily orders from 40 million to 60 million, but just 12 days to gain another 20 million.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store