Corporate Governance, Risk Management, Firm Characteristics, and the Performance of Commercial State-owned Enterprises in Uganda
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Date
2023Author
Turyakira, Nazarius
Type
ThesisLanguage
enMetadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Despite embracing corporate governance, available evidence shows that Commercial Stateowned
Enterprises (CSOEs) in Uganda are highly characterised by inefficiencies, financial
irregularities, and poor risk management, leading to high leverage levels, high interest rates, and
continuous poor performance. This study set out to establish the relationship between corporate
governance, risk management, firm characteristics, and the performance of Commercial State-
Owned Enterprises (CSOEs) in Uganda. The objectives of the study were to; determine the
relationship between corporate governance and the performance of CSOEs in Uganda, establish
the effect of risk management on the relationship between corporate governance and the
performance of CSOEs in Uganda, examine the effect of firm characteristics on the relationship
between corporate governance and the performance of CSOEs in Uganda, and establish the joint
effect of corporate governance, risk management, and firm characteristics on the performance of
CSOEs in Uganda. Four null hypotheses were created and empirically tested in accordance with
the study objectives. The study adopted a cross section research design that involved the analysis
of secondary data on corporate governance, firm characteristics, and firm performance and
primary data on risk management. Panel data was collected from 34 CSOEs representing 75.5
percent of the originally sampled enterprises. The same enterprises provided primary data on risk
management. The reliability of panel data was ensured by tracing the source documents from
published audited reports of CSOEs, while that of primary data was tested using Cronbach Alpha
Coefficients. Pearson correlations, random effects, and fixed effect regression analyses were
used to test the study hypotheses. The study established a significant relationship between
corporate governance through proxies of board composition, board characteristics, and audit
committee independence, and the performance of CSOEs which led to the rejection of the
associated null hypotheses. The study further established that risk management mediates the
relationship between corporate governance through the proxy of board characteristics, and firm
performance leading to the rejection of the null hypothesis. Risk management did not mediate
the relationship between corporate governance through proxies of shareholding, audit committee
independence and board composition and performance of CSOEs, hence the null hypotheses
were not rejected. The study found no evidence of a moderating effect of firm characteristics on
the relationship between corporate governance and CSOEs performance, allowing the null
hypotheses not be to rejected. The study also found that corporate governance, firm
characteristics, and risk management can jointly explain firm performance in a meaningful and
positive way, resulting in rejecting the null hypothesis. It was concluded that improving
corporate governance through aspects of board composition, board characteristics, and audit
committee independence would improve CSOEs’ performance. It was also concluded that
enhancing corporate governance while taking risk management into account leads to improved
CSOEs’ performance. Firm characteristics have no moderating effect on the relationship between
corporate governance and firm performance of CSOEs. It is recommended that risk management
and firm size should be considered together by organizations attempting to improve their
performance through corporate governance. Institutional, agency, contingency, and resource
dependency theories were all validated in this study. The findings of the study are significant to
CSOE policy-making entities in Uganda who may use the findings to formulate policies on
ownership, and board composition, particularly in terms of gender diversity and board expertise.
More study can be done in a broader context, involving both commercial and non-commercial
state owned companies, and using a combination of quantitative and qualitative methodologies.
Publisher
University of Nairobi
Rights
Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 United StatesUsage Rights
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/us/Collections
- School of Business [1919]
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