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Employee representation and board size in the Nordic countries
Authors:Steen Thomsen  Caspar Rose  Dorte Kronborg
Institution:1.Department of International Economics and Management, Copenhagen Business School,Center for Corporate Governance,Copenhagen,Denmark;2.Department of Finance, Copenhagen Business School,Center for Statistics,Frederiksberg, Copenhagen,Denmark
Abstract:Several European countries have mandatory employee representation on company boards, but the consequences for corporate governance are debated. We use employee representation rules in the otherwise quite similar Nordic countries (Denmark, Finland, Norway, and Sweden) to elicit information on shareholder preferences for employee representation and board size. We find that shareholders tend to choose board structures that minimize the proportion of employee representatives. In Denmark and Norway employee representation depends on board size, and shareholders choose board sizes that minimize the number of employee representatives. However, many companies have more employee representatives than is mandatory. In Sweden, where the law mandates a fixed number of employee representatives (two or three depending on firm size), shareholders choose to have larger boards. In Finland, where employee representation is not mandatory, <1 % of companies choose to have it. Whatever, the merits of employee representation, shareholders appear to be mildly averse to it.
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