An EU-inspired corporate governance statement for Maltese listed companies - boon or scourge?
Author(s)
Baldacchino, Peter J.Keywords
Corporate governance -- MaltaCorporate governance -- Europe -- Standards
Business enterprises -- Malta
Business ethics
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Show full item recordAbstract
The traditional definition of corporate governance is that of “the system by which companies are directed and controlled” (Cadbury Committee,1992: p 15). Indeed, corporate governance is concerned with the interaction of a company’s management, board of directors and stakeholders in ensuring the fairness of such a system. It needs hardly be said that corporate governance systems needed reform in the past decades for the sake of protecting the various stakeholders. For example, neither the USA nor the European Union could envy each other in the light of recent major corporate scandals such as Enron and Parmalat. Crises stimulate the search for new and more rigorous methods of surveillance and control (Moran, 1986). As would therefore be expected, both legislators and regulatory bodies have been increasingly involved in the tightening up of the global legislative regulatory framework.peer-reviewed
Date
2007Type
info:eu-repo/semantics/bookPartIdentifier
oai:www.um.edu.mt:123456789/18674Baldacchino, P. J. (2007). An EU-inspired corporate governance statement for Maltese listed companies – boon or scourge? In P.G. Xuereb (Ed.), Civil Society Report Business Ethics and Religious Values in the European Union and Malta - for a Moral Playing Field, Malta: European Documentation and Research Centre, University of Malta (pp. 161-167).
https://www.um.edu.mt/library/oar//handle/123456789/18674