Agency costs: An analysis of the impact of corporate governance on the performance of public sector entities in Zimbabwe
Abstract
The impact of corporate governance on organisational performance is an area that has long been
debated by behavioural scientists, legal practitioners, financiers, economists, and business
operators. However, there seems to be no agreement over what constitutes an effective corporate
governance mechanism that aligns agents’ or managers’ interests with those of principals (owners/
shareholders). This research examines the role of corporate governance in mitigating agency cost
(thereby promoting firm performance) in a sample of thirty six public sector companies in
Zimbabwe selected on the basis that all required information is available and the organisations are
the biggest in the sector in terms of market capitalisation. It is suggested that observance of
corporate governance can lower agency costs resulting in higher firm performance. This research
uses the asset utilisation ratio (dependent variable) as a proxy to measure agency cost. Multivariate
fixed effect regression is used to analyse the findings. The independent variables are the potential
determinants of agency costs which are categorised as representing ownership influences and
corporate governance mechanisms (director ownership, institutional ownership, external
ownership, board size, CEO-chair duality, board independence and board remuneration).
The research findings reveal that asset utilisation has a positive association with board
independence and board remuneration. There is also a positive relationship between director
ownership and CEO-Chair duality while institutional and external ownership was rare within the
public sector in Zimbabwe. Additionally, institutional ownership was found to be negatively
related to director ownership while the later also has no influence on asset utilisation ratio. There is
also a negative association between asset utilisation ratio and CEO-Chair duality while board
remuneration and board independence positively influences performance. The research findings
thus reveal that more director and institutional ownership lessens agency costs. Moreover, small
boards lower agency cost. Furthermore, segregation of the CEO and chairperson positions and
higher remuneration lowers agency costs. However, from multivariate linear regression analysis,
company specific fixed effects are also highly significant, implying considerable firm
heterogeneity across sample firms. Moreover, 39% of variation in agency costs is explained by
independent variables of corporate governance mechanisms while 61% is left to be explained by
other factors implying corporate governance remains critical but certainly not the sole driver for
agency costs and performance in public sector entities in Zimbabwe. Basing on results from this
research, a number of recommendations to improve corporate governance and thus firm
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performance by reducing the agency problem within the public sector in Zimbabwe were herein
suggested.