Board of directors
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A board of directors, also called board of trustees, board of governors, board of managers, or board of curators, is a group of people who oversee the affairs of a corporation. One member of the group may be designated or elected to serve as chairperson and is referred to as the chairman of the board.
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Duties and powers
Board members in most legal jurisdictions have specific fiduciary duties whereby they must act for the benefit of the corporation. A board is either self-perpetuating or elected by the members of the corporation. In the case of an incorporated joint-stock company, the board is almost always elected by the owners (shareholders) of the company. Individuals can be members of the board of directors of multiple corporations at one time. In case of non-profit organizations, the board of trustees is most commonly appointed by the members of the organization.
The main duties of the board are to choose the chief executive officer and other officers to run the day-to-day operations of the corporation and to exercise high-level oversight. Typically corporate boards are involved in issues of ownership, strategy, financing, and mergers and acquisitions.
The actual power held by the board of directors varies widely from corporation to corporation. In some, the board of directors form a powerful body to which senior management is subservient. Other times, the board is a formality which merely rubber stamps decisions of the CEO and senior management.
Often the CEO serves concurrently as the chairman of the board. Some contend that this is inappropriate in a publicly-traded joint-stock company because it gives management too much power over the board, diminishing its oversight powers.
Larger boards are partitioned into several committees with specific tasks. For example, a compensation committee is commonly formed to make decisions regarding salary and stock allocations for top management (and sometimes for the entire employee pool). Others might include an audit committee, a legal affairs committee, and a mergers and acquisitions committee.
A board will often consist of executive and non-executive directors. Executive directors play an active part in running the company, while non-executive directors are only there to offer advice.
It is widely considered good management practice to create a board of directors with persons with expertise from diverse backgrounds and to have outside directors or non-executive directors who can provide a perspective on a situation which is independent from management. For example it is extremely common for a good percentage of the boards of most large corporations to be from academia, especially business schools. Sometimes relatives of powerful politicians are selected to serve on boards, such as when Hillary Clinton served on the board at Arkansas-based Wal-Mart while her husband, Bill, was Governor of Arkansas.
Failures
While the primary responsibility of boards is to ensure that the corporation's management is performing its job correctly, actually achieving this in practice can be difficult. In a number of "corporate scandals" of the 1990s, one notable feature revealed in subsequent investigations is that boards were not aware of the activities of the managers that they hired, and the true financial state of the corporation. A number of factors may be involved in this tendency:
- Most boards largely rely on management to report information to them, thus allowing management to place the desired 'spin' on information, or even conceal or lie about the true state of a company.
- Boards of directors are part-time bodies, whose members meet only occasionally and may not know each other particularly well. This unfamiliarity can make it difficult for board members to question management.
- CEOs tend to be rather forceful personalities. In some cases, CEOs are accused of exercising too much influence over the company's board.
- Directors may not have the time or the skills required to understand the details of corporate business, allowing management to obscure problems.
- The same directors who appointed the present CEO oversee their performance. This makes it difficult for some directors to dispassionately evaluate the CEO's performance.
- Directors often feel that a judgement of a manager, particularly one who has performed well in the past, should be respected. This can be quite legitimate, but poses problems if the manager's judgement is indeed flawed.
- All of the above may contribute to a culture of "not rocking the boat" at board meetings.
Because of this, the role of boards in corporate governance, and how to improve their oversight capability, has been examined carefully in recent years, and new legislation in a number of jurisdictions, and an increased focus on the topic by boards themselves, has seen changes implemented to try and improve their performance.
Sarbanes-Oxley Act
In the United States, the Sarbanes-Oxley Act (SOX) has introduced new standards of accountability on the board of directors. Members now risk large fines and prison sentences in the case of accounting crimes. Internal controls are now the direct responsibility of directors. This means that the vast majority of public companies now have hired internal auditors to ensure that the company adheres to the highest standards of internal controls. Additionally, these internal auditors are required by law to report directly to the audit board. This group consists of board of directors members where more than half of the members are outside the company and one of those members outside the company is an accounting expert.
See also
fr:Conseil d'administration it:Consiglio di amministrazione ja:取締役会 nl:Raad van Bestuur sv:Styrelse he:דירקטוריון ru:Совет директоров