Gender diversity on boards has a positive impact on financial performance of companies through corporate governance, a National University of Singapore (NUS) Business School study has found.
In the study of about 500 Singapore-listed companies pooled across 5 years [1], the findings also indicated that women independent board directors increased financial performance by elevating the company’s market value, vis-a-vis the company’s book value. According to the study, if the average woman independent directors on boards increases by one, the company’s financial performance, as measured by Tobin’s Q ratio of market value to book value, would increase by 11.8%.
The results were announced today at a seminar “Resolving the Performance Puzzle of Board Gender Diversity” organised by the Diversity Action Committee (DAC). Discussions at the seminar centred around the impact of women representation in senior leadership and highlighted how to achieve a more gender diverse leadership for better stewardship and governance.
The study, conducted by NUS Business School’s Centre for Governance, Institutions and Organisations (CGIO), examined the impact of women board representation on a company’s corporate governance scores and financial performance.
DAC Chairman, Mr Loh Boon Chye said, “The findings of CGIO’s study point to what many have suggested about the business benefits of having gender diversity on the board. This study is timely as proposed revisions to the Code of Corporate Governance promote diversity policy transparency and board renewal. We are seeing more women being appointed to the boards of SGX’s largest listed companies [2]. We hope that companies will now appreciate the benefits and take action to bring more women onto their boards.”
Associate Professor Lawrence Loh, Director of CGIO, NUS Business School, said, “Up to now, studies across the world have found that the impact of board gender diversity on financial performance is either non-existent or weakly positive. Through econometric techniques, our study is the first in the Singapore context to establish that such a relationship exists through corporate governance.”
Summary of the Study
The CGIO study investigated the relationship between board gender diversity and corporate governance score, and between these variables and financial performance, using ordinary least squares (OLS) regression models.
The study used a combination of publicly available data of director profiles, company corporate governance scores from the Singapore Governance and Transparency Index (“SGTI”) and company financial performance indicators [3] obtained from Bloomberg.
Key findings
Conclusion
or more information, the study can be accessed at https://bschool.nus.edu.sg/cgio/research/board-diversity/.
[1] REITS and Business Trusts were excluded from the study as they were not captured in the initial years of the Singapore Governance and Transparency Index (SGTI). [2] According to the latest statistics released by the Diversity Action Committee (DAC) on 13 February 2018, women’s participation on boards in Singapore’s Top 100 primary-listed companies have shown its largest increase over the past 3 years, achieving 13.1 per cent of women on boards. This is the highest increase over the past three years, after 10.9% in 2016, 9.5% in 2015 and 8.6% women on boards in 2014. [3] Both return on equity (book measure) and Tobin’s Q (hybrid measure) were considered. [4] It should be noted that the sample has a maximum of three women independent directors. Thus caution must be exercised to extrapolate the relationship beyond this number.