Lower Defeat Thresholds for Minority Shareholders and Corporate Governance: Evidence from the Australian “Two-strikes” Rule
Abstract
This study assesses the causal impact of minority shareholder empowerment via lower defeat thresholds in “say-on-pay” votes on CEO compensation and career consequences for directors. We exploit the adoption of the Australian “two-strikes” rule as a quasi-exogenous shock, which empowers shareholders to vote on a board dismissal if a firm’s remuneration report receives 25 percent or more dissent votes for two consecutive years. Using a difference-in-differences methodology, we find that firms respond to a “strike” by curbing excessive CEO pay. Under the two-strikes regime, independent directors are held more accountable for poor oversight and experience significant reputational penalties in terms of turnover and the loss of outside directorships subsequent to receiving a strike. The results are mainly driven by firms receiving a non-majority strike, indicating that the effectiveness of the two-strikes regime stems largely from the lower defeat threshold.
Zoom link: https://eur-nl.zoom.us/j/91662698556?pwd=VGxhZk1mMFJyU2x2ZkEzNy9FbTR0dz09
Meeting ID: 916 6269 8556