Corporate board size and financial performance of private limited companies in Uganda
Date
2020Author
John, Rwakihembo
Kamukama, Prof. Nixon
Fredrick, Dr. Nsambu Kijjambu
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Show full item recordAbstract
he purpose-The paper seeks to compare the corporate board size and the financial performance
of private companies in Uganda.
Methodology-The paper adopted a positivist paradigm besides a cross-sectional study design.
Researchers gathered quantitative data from 394 companies in Western and Central Uganda. An
open questionnaire was administered to board members and executives from companies. Pearson
correlation and standard regression techniques were used for data analysis.
Findings-A significant positive relationship between the performance of the firm and the board
size among private companies was established from the findings.
Unique Contribution to Practice and Policy-This study will provide a precise and direct
understanding of the relationship between board size and performance.
The practical implications-The study recommends that private companies should recruit large
boards of directors due to their diversified skills and connections that increase firm value.
Research limitations-The study falls short of examining the influence of other characteristics of
the board, such as composition, and leadership structure, on financial performance but solely
concentrates on the board size. Besides, it was cross-sectional and generalized all private
companies without considering industry-specific factors that could have changed the results.
Originality/value-This is the first study that focuses on exploring the comparison between the
corporate board size and the financial performance of private companies in Uganda.
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- Research Articles [23]