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Journal ArticleDOI

Family Governance and Firm Performance: Agency, Stewardship, and Capabilities:

Danny Miller, +1 more
- 01 Mar 2006 - 
- Vol. 19, Iss: 1, pp 73-87
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TLDR
In this paper, the authors examine the nature of family businesses in an attempt to explain why some seem to do so well and others so poorly, and draw conclusions about the drivers that make some family businesses great competitors, while leaving others at a disadvantage.
Abstract
After decades of being viewed as obsolete and problem ridden, recent research has begun to show that major, publicly traded family-controlled businesses (FCBs) actually out-perform other types of businesses. This article examines the nature of such family businesses in an attempt to explain why some seem to do so well and others so poorly. It begins with four fundamental governance choices that distinguish among different kinds of family businesses: level and mode of family ownership, family leadership, the broader involvement of multiple family members, and the planned or actual participation of later generations. Using precepts from agency and stewardship theory, it relates these dimensions to the nature of the resource-allocation decisions made by the business and capability development, which in turn have implications for financial performance. Propositions are drawn about the drivers that make some family businesses great competitors—while leaving others at a disadvantage.

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Citations
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Socioemotional Wealth in Family Firms Theoretical Dimensions, Assessment Approaches, and Agenda for Future Research

TL;DR: In this article, the authors make the case for the socioemotional wealth (SEW) approach as the potential dominant paradigm in the family business field and argue that SEW is the most important differentiator of the family firm as a unique entity and helps explain why family firms behave distinctively.
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Socioemotional Wealth and Corporate Responses to Institutional Pressures: Do Family-Controlled Firms Pollute Less?:

TL;DR: In this article, the authors compared the environmental performance of family and non-family public corporations between 1998 and 2002, using a sample of 194 U.S. firms required to report their emissions.
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1 The Fundamental Agency Problem and Its Mitigation: Independence, Equity, and the Market for Corporate Control

TL;DR: A review of the fundamental agency problem and its mitigation through independence, equity, and the market for corporate control can be found in this paper, where the three principal approaches that have long been proposed to mitigate the fundamental problem remain contentious.
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Culture of Family Commitment and Strategic Flexibility: The Moderating Effect of Stewardship:

TL;DR: This article found a family firm's culture of commitment to the business is positively associated with its strategic flexibility, the ability to pursue new opportunities and respond to threats in the competitive environment, and stewardship-oriented organizational culture positively moderated the family commitment-strategic flexibility relationship.
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Family Involvement in Ownership and Management: Exploring Nonlinear Effects on Performance

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors explored the presence of nonlinear effects of family involvement in ownership and management on performance and found that the positive effects that previous literature associates with family managers do not appear strong enough to compensate for the disadvantages deriving from an on-monetary goal orientation, nor do they compensate for costs derived from the need to solve conflicts between family managers and the impossibility of enlarging the company's social and intellectual capital through the employment of nonfamily managers.
References
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