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Título
The influence of Corporate Governance on Teaching in Corporate Finance
Autor(es)
Palabras clave
Corporate finance
Corporate governance
Clasificación UNESCO
5311 Organización y Dirección de Empresas
5311.02 Gestión Financiera
Fecha de publicación
2006
Editor
Elsevier
Citación
Mallin, Chris., Pintado, Julio., De la Torre, Chabela. (2006). The influence of Corporate Governance on Teaching in Corporate Finance. Long Range Planning, 39(4) &, pp. 457-464. doi.org/10.1016/j.lrp.2006.10.003
Resumen
[EN In the past few years, the development of corporate governance issues has been widely
documented in the financial press and studied by academic researchers. The growing interest in
corporate governance is supported by the publication of surveys of the topic, for example by
Shleifer and Vishny, and more recently by Morck, Wolfenzon and Yeung.1 Books have also
addressed this topic, such as the ones by Monks and Minow, and Mallin.2 However, textbooks on
corporate finance per se have not yet incorporated this subject. While corporate governance is
a centrally relevant area for companies, it also has very important implications for corporate
finance of which financial students e the managers and directors of tomorrow e should be
aware, ideally from seeing the subject covered in textbooks on corporate finance.
The contents of the textbooks on corporate finance are quite standard and they do not
mention the corporate governance issue, except for Samuels, Wilkes and Brayshaw; Pike and
Neale; Arnold; Smart, Megginson and Gitman; and Brealey, Myers and Allen.3 The first four
introduce corporate governance in the first chapter as a key element of an overview of financial
management. Samuels, Wilkes and Brayshaw introduce the main recommendations of the
Cadbury report, while Pike and Neale describe the principles of good governance. Arnold covers
the Cadbury report as well as some corporate governance examples from the UK and other
countries, such as Russia and South Korea. In Smart, Megginson and Gitman, corporate
governance is considered among the five basic corporate finance functions, besides financing,
capital budgeting, financial management and risk management. Finally, Brealey, Myers and Allen
address the corporate governance issue in Chapter 2, when discussing the corporate goals, and in
Chapter 34, when addressing the financial markets and institutions (including the relevance of
investor protection and the development of financial markets) and the ownership control and
governance across countries. However, as far as we know, no textbook on corporate finance goes
further in the integration of the corporate governance topic.
In this context, our literature review reveals that ideally corporate governance should be
incorporated in a chapter in the first part of corporate finance textbooks, which would allow
students to understand financial decisions better. Additionally, this learning strategy facilitates
a broader analysis of these decisions.
URI
ISSN
0024-6301
DOI
10.1016/j.lrp.2006.10.003
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