Interlocking directorates and dynamic corporate performance : the roles of centrality, structural holes and number of connections in social networks

Abstract

This study investigates how interlocking directorates affect dynamic corporate performance among 187 Taiwanese electronics companies during a 3 year sampling period (2013–2015). This study consists of two stages. First, this study measures the operational efficiency of electronics companies using the dynamic slacks-based measure model of data envelopment analysis. Second, this study adopts a truncated-regression model with bootstrap to examine the impacts of interlocking directorates on dynamic corporate performance. The empirical findings of this study indicate that centrality (direct connections), structural holes (indirect connections), and the number of connections (total connections) related to interlocking directorates have significant positive influences on the dynamic corporate performance of Taiwanese electronics companies. The results suggest that more interlocks at the board level leads to better corporate performance over a long-term period. Overall, this study uses social network analysis to shed light on the role of interlocking directorates and its importance to dynamic corporate performance from the resource dependence perspective. © 2019, Springer-Verlag GmbH Germany, part of Springer Nature.

Description

This article is not available at CUD collection. The version of scholarly record of this article is published in Review of Managerial Science (2021) available online at: https://doi.org/10.1007/s11846-019-00347-2

Keywords

Corporate performance, Data envelopment analysis, Dynamic slacks-based measure, Interlocking directorates, Social network

Citation

Wang, W.-K., Lu, W.-M., Kweh, Q. L., Nourani, M., & Hong, R.-S. (2021). Interlocking directorates and dynamic corporate performance: The roles of centrality, structural holes and number of connections in social networks. Review of Managerial Science, 15(2), 437–457. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11846-019-00347-2

DOI