Effects of board independence on microfinance institutions’ performance: The case of Bangladesh

Research aim: This study aims to examine the relationship between board independence and the performance of microfinance institutions (MFIs). Early studies on microfinance have made immense contributions, particularly in identifying the factors that influence performance. Studies addressing board i...

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Main Authors: Mohammad Delwar Hussain, Zubir Azhar, Ibrahim Kamal Abdul Rahman
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Universiti Malaya 2021-02-01
Series:Asian Journal of Accounting Perspectives
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ejournal.um.edu.my/index.php/AJAP/article/view/28761
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spelling doaj-95e0f779af574655b2f9641d9b7157ce2021-05-17T06:32:05ZengUniversiti MalayaAsian Journal of Accounting Perspectives2672-72930128-03842021-02-01141Effects of board independence on microfinance institutions’ performance: The case of BangladeshMohammad Delwar Hussain0Zubir Azhar1Ibrahim Kamal Abdul Rahman2School of Business, Green University of Bangladesh (GUB), Dhaka, BangladeshSchool of Management, Universiti Sains Malaysia, 11800 USM, Penang, MalaysiaUniKL Business School, Universiti Kuala Lumpur (UniKL), Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia Research aim: This study aims to examine the relationship between board independence and the performance of microfinance institutions (MFIs). Early studies on microfinance have made immense contributions, particularly in identifying the factors that influence performance. Studies addressing board independence and its impact on performance remain scarce. Design/ Methodology/ Approach: This study utilised a panel dataset involving 80 MFIs in Bangladesh for the period of 2005–2018. A panel data regression technique was applied to measure the relationship between MFIs’ performance and board independence based on the 80 cross-sectional MFIs with 13 years of data. Research findings: Our findings suggest that independent directors and board size facilitate MFIs to become financially sustainable. The findings also indicate that CEO duality enhances institutional sustainability but does not enhance outreach to the poor. While the results of this study partially support the proposition of stewardship theory, the proposition of agency theory is rejected. This indicates that MFIs in Bangladesh are operated by motivated agents with similar interests to the MFIs’ owners. Theoretical contribution/ Originality: This investigation contributes to the microfinance governance literature by highlighting the argument that board independence reduces conflict between MFIs’ principle and agent. This study also contributes to the global debate concerning CEO duality and MFIs’ double bottom line performance from the perspective of a developing country, such as Bangladesh. Practitioner/ Policy implication: The practical implication of this research is on governance mechanisms in terms of their effectiveness, which is influenced by MFIs’ competence. Since board members should promote stakeholders’ interests rather than the interests of the organisation, there is a need for sound guiding principles that should form an integral part of the policy for better MFI governance practices. Limitation/ Implication: The limitation of this study mainly concerns the lack of evidence concerning whether or not every licensed MFI in Bangladesh has non-manageable stakeholders. Similarly, this study fails to capture the insolvency level of customers. Future studies may expand on this approach and create a measure for MFIs’ outreach to the poor. Keywords: Bangladesh, Board Independence, Governance, Microfinance Type of article: Research paper JEL Classification: G21, M41 https://ejournal.um.edu.my/index.php/AJAP/article/view/28761BangladeshBoard IndependenceGovernanceMicrofinance
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Mohammad Delwar Hussain
Zubir Azhar
Ibrahim Kamal Abdul Rahman
spellingShingle Mohammad Delwar Hussain
Zubir Azhar
Ibrahim Kamal Abdul Rahman
Effects of board independence on microfinance institutions’ performance: The case of Bangladesh
Asian Journal of Accounting Perspectives
Bangladesh
Board Independence
Governance
Microfinance
author_facet Mohammad Delwar Hussain
Zubir Azhar
Ibrahim Kamal Abdul Rahman
author_sort Mohammad Delwar Hussain
title Effects of board independence on microfinance institutions’ performance: The case of Bangladesh
title_short Effects of board independence on microfinance institutions’ performance: The case of Bangladesh
title_full Effects of board independence on microfinance institutions’ performance: The case of Bangladesh
title_fullStr Effects of board independence on microfinance institutions’ performance: The case of Bangladesh
title_full_unstemmed Effects of board independence on microfinance institutions’ performance: The case of Bangladesh
title_sort effects of board independence on microfinance institutions’ performance: the case of bangladesh
publisher Universiti Malaya
series Asian Journal of Accounting Perspectives
issn 2672-7293
0128-0384
publishDate 2021-02-01
description Research aim: This study aims to examine the relationship between board independence and the performance of microfinance institutions (MFIs). Early studies on microfinance have made immense contributions, particularly in identifying the factors that influence performance. Studies addressing board independence and its impact on performance remain scarce. Design/ Methodology/ Approach: This study utilised a panel dataset involving 80 MFIs in Bangladesh for the period of 2005–2018. A panel data regression technique was applied to measure the relationship between MFIs’ performance and board independence based on the 80 cross-sectional MFIs with 13 years of data. Research findings: Our findings suggest that independent directors and board size facilitate MFIs to become financially sustainable. The findings also indicate that CEO duality enhances institutional sustainability but does not enhance outreach to the poor. While the results of this study partially support the proposition of stewardship theory, the proposition of agency theory is rejected. This indicates that MFIs in Bangladesh are operated by motivated agents with similar interests to the MFIs’ owners. Theoretical contribution/ Originality: This investigation contributes to the microfinance governance literature by highlighting the argument that board independence reduces conflict between MFIs’ principle and agent. This study also contributes to the global debate concerning CEO duality and MFIs’ double bottom line performance from the perspective of a developing country, such as Bangladesh. Practitioner/ Policy implication: The practical implication of this research is on governance mechanisms in terms of their effectiveness, which is influenced by MFIs’ competence. Since board members should promote stakeholders’ interests rather than the interests of the organisation, there is a need for sound guiding principles that should form an integral part of the policy for better MFI governance practices. Limitation/ Implication: The limitation of this study mainly concerns the lack of evidence concerning whether or not every licensed MFI in Bangladesh has non-manageable stakeholders. Similarly, this study fails to capture the insolvency level of customers. Future studies may expand on this approach and create a measure for MFIs’ outreach to the poor. Keywords: Bangladesh, Board Independence, Governance, Microfinance Type of article: Research paper JEL Classification: G21, M41
topic Bangladesh
Board Independence
Governance
Microfinance
url https://ejournal.um.edu.my/index.php/AJAP/article/view/28761
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