Introduction
The two board system of directors theoretically presents a way for greater accountability and oversight in corporate governance. The system was developed in Germany with the idea being to have a supervisory board over the management board, the members of the former elected by shareholders. In functional terms, however, the supervisory board can be involved in long-term decisions that impact the corporation—so it is not entirely accurate to define this board as being focused on accountability and oversight (Proctor, 2002). This paper will discuss the structure and role of the two board system of directors, how the board has evolved and what the greatest challenges are facing it.
The Two Board System
The structure of the Board of Directors of the two-board system as used in Germany came about as result of that nation’s preference for a more inclusive form of governance that combined oversight with representation (Owen, 2003). The two-tiered board structure is comprised of one group of insiders who sit on the management board and another group of representatives of employees and shareholders making up the supervisory board. Thus, the two-tiered board system consists of one management board and one supervisory board that work together to oversee the company. The management board is filled with insiders, i.e., directors. The supervisory board is filled with shareholders and workers. The supervisory board oversees the management board. German banks play a major role in the boards of corporations in Germany, as Ewmi (2005) points out, since they are considered shareholders who have long-term stakes in these companies. For that reason, it is not uncommon to find German bank representatives sitting on the supervisory boards.
Another key aspect of the German board system is that voting rights are much more curtailed than in the US. Ewmi (2005) notes that “voting right restrictions are legal; these limit a shareholder to voting a certain percentage of the corporation’s total share capital, regardless of share ownership position” (p. 10). This is an important point because it indicates that there cannot be a monopoly of voting rights, held by a handful of people. Voting rights are meant to be more evenly distributed in the German two-tier system to prevent the kind of concentrated power one often sees in companies like Tesla, where the Board is essentially managed entirely by one man and his family (Cornell & Damodaran, 2014). However, as Siebert (2004) notes, the banks tend to have a dominating position in terms of voting rights and control over boards in Germany’s system. The reason the German system has not succeeded in avoiding monopolistic control over boards has to do with block holdings of shares: “block holding seems to dominate in Germany due to the fact that share owner representatives are more powerful in bargaining with employee representatives on the supervisory board than if they had dispersed votes” (Siebert, 2004,...
References
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Cornell, B., & Damodaran, A. (2014). Tesla: Anatomy of a Run-up. The Journal of Portfolio Management, 41(1), 139-151.
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