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The Diligent team
GRC trends and insights

What is the history of corporate governance and how has it changed?

March 18, 2024
0 min read
Image of big open book representing the history of corporate governance and how it has changed.

The history of corporate governance is long, rich and packed with twists and turns. It’s a topic that touches on managerial accountability, board structure and shareholder rights — including both periods of shareholder passivity and shareholder power. Governance began with the rise of corporations, dating back to the East India Company, the Hudson’s Bay Company, the Levant Company and other major chartered companies during the 16th and 17th centuries.

While the concept of corporate governance has existed for centuries, the name didn’t come into vogue until the 1970s. The United States was the only country using the term at the time. The balance of power and decision-making between board directors, executives and shareholders has been evolving for centuries. The issue has been a hot topic among academic experts, regulators, executives, and investors, making corporate governance history critical to understanding why corporate governance is so important.

This article will highlight key milestones in the history of corporate governance, including:

  • A complete corporate governance timeline
  • The growing emphasis on corporate governance
  • The impact of economic activity on corporate governance history
  • How technology has influenced modern governance
  • Trends that point to the future of corporate governance

Corporate governance history at a glance

The history of corporate governance dates back to World War II when robust economic growth put massive power in the hands of corporate managers. Review a timeline of critical events before diving into each corporate governance evolution in-depth.

YearCorporate governance milestone
17th CenturyThe Dutch East India Company introduces the concept of joint-stock companies.
19th CenturyLimited liability becomes a legal principle, separating personal and corporate assets.
1930sThe Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) is established in the United States to regulate securities markets.
1940sWorld War II ends. Investors are unconcerned about governance as corporate performance soars.
1970sCorporate governance enters the spotlight as the SEC takes a stance on reforms.
1980sThe rise of hostile takeovers prompts a focus on shareholder rights and board accountability.
1992The U.K.’s Committee on the Financial Aspects of Corporate Governance (Cadbury Committee) releases its Code of Best Practice.
1998The U.K. Corporate Governance Code replaces the Cadbury Code of Best Practice, incorporating broader governance principles.
2002The United States enacted the Sarbanes-Oxley Act to improve corporate governance and financial reporting.
2008Again, governance comes to the fore as the U.S. economy experiences a crisis.
2010Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act is passed in the U.S., introducing additional corporate governance reforms.
2016The U.K. Corporate Governance Code is revised, focusing on the relationship between companies and stakeholders.
2019Business Roundtable issues a new statement emphasizing the purpose of a corporation and the importance of all stakeholders.
2020Consumers push corporations to act more ethically and sustainably following the COVID-19 pandemic and the resulting economic slump.
2023New universal proxy rules pass, affirming the voice of shareholders in the board room.
2024 Technology sweeps the board room as boards increasingly turn to centralized governance platforms to aid their decision-making.

World War II - 1980s: Corporate growth emphasizes developing corporate governance

Post-World War II

After World War II, the United States experienced strong economic growth, which strongly impacted the history of corporate governance. Corporations were thriving and proliferating. Managers primarily called the shots and expected board directors and shareholders to follow. In most cases, they did. This was an interesting dichotomy since managers highly influenced the selection of board directors. Unless it came to matters of dividends and stock prices, investors tended to steer clear of governance matters.

1970s

In the 1970s, corporate governance history began to change as the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) brought the issue of corporate governance to the forefront when they brought a stance on official corporate governance reforms. In 1976, the term corporate governance first appeared in the Federal Register, the official journal of the federal government.In the 1960s, the Penn Central Railway diversified by starting pipelines, hotels, industrial parks and commercial real estate. Penn Central filed for bankruptcy in 1970, and the public scrutinized the board. In 1974, the SEC brought proceedings against three outside directors for misrepresenting the company’s financial condition and a wide range of misconduct by Penn Central executives.Around the same time, the SEC caught on to widespread payments by corporations to foreign officials over falsifying corporate records. Corporations formed audit committees and appointed more outside directors during this era. In 1976, the SEC prompted the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) to require each listed corporation to have an audit committee composed of all independent board directors, and they complied. Advocates pushed to get governance right by requiring audit committees, nomination committees, compensation committees and only one managerial appointee.

The 1980s: A corporate governance reform counter-reaction

The 1980s ended the 1970s movement for corporate governance reform due to a political shift to the right and a more conservative Congress. This era brought much opposition to deregulation, another significant change in the history of corporate governance. Lawmakers advanced The Protection of Shareholders’ Rights Act of 1980, but it stalled in Congress.Debates on corporate governance focused on a new project called the Principles of Corporate Governance by the American Law Institute (ALI) in 1981. The NYSE had previously supported this project but changed their stance after they reviewed the first draft. The Business Roundtable also opposed ALI’s attempts at reform. Advocates for corporations felt they were strong enough to oppose regulatory reform outright without the restrictive ALI-led reforms.

Businesses had concerns about some of the issues in Tentative Draft No. 1 of the Principles of Corporative Governance. The draft recommended that boards appoint mostly independent directors and establish audit and nominating committees. Corporate advocates were concerned that if companies implemented these measures, it would increase liability risks for board directors.Law and economic scholars also heavily criticized the initial ALI proposals. They expressed concerns that the proposals didn’t account for the pressures of the market forces and didn’t consider empirical evidence. In addition, they didn’t believe that fomenting litigation would serve a purpose in advancing effective corporate governance.In the end, the final version of ALI’s Principles of Corporate Governance was so watered down that it had little impact on the history of corporate governance by the time it was approved and published in 1994. Scholars maintained that market mechanisms would keep managers and shareholders aligned.

The ‘Deal Decade’ leads to shareholder activism

The 1980s was also referred to as the ‘Deal Decade.’ Institutional shareholders grabbed more shares, which gave them more control. They stopped selling out when times got tough. Executives went on the defensive and struck deals to prevent hostile takeovers.State legislators countered takeovers with anti-takeover statutes at the state level. That, combined with an increased debt market and an economic downturn, discouraged merger activity. The Institutional Shareholder Services (ISS) was formed to help with voting rights. Shareholders fought with legal defenses, but judges often favored corporate decisions when outside directors supported board decisions. Investors started to advocate for more independent directors and to base executive pay on performance rather than corporate size.

2008: Financial crisis changes corporate governance history

By 2007, banks had been taking excessive risks, and there was growing concern about a possible collapse of the world financial system. Governments sought to prevent fallout by offering massive bailouts and other financial measures.

The collapse of the Lehman Brothers Bank developed into a major international banking crisis, which became the worst financial crisis since the Great Depression in the 1930s. Congress passed the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Act in 2010 to promote economic stability in the United States, a significant milestone in corporate governance history.

2010s: Corporate governance surges as risks are on the rise

The fallout from the financial crisis placed a heavier focus on best practices for corporate governance principles throughout the 2010s. Boards of directors felt more pressure than ever before to implement good governance practices like transparency and accountability. Strong governance principles encouraged corporations to have a majority of independent directors and well-composed, diverse boards. Advancements in technology improved efficiency in governance and created new risks as well. Data breaches were a new and genuine concern for corporations. The first targets were banks and financial institutions. As these institutions have bolstered the security measures in their governance framework, hackers have turned their efforts to smaller corporations within various industries, including governments.

2020s: Global economic uncertainty rattles stakeholders — and the board room

Uncertainty has so far characterized the 2020s, a decade that will surely go down in the history of corporate governance. Kicked off by the COVID-19 pandemic and the subsequent breakdown of the supply chain, 2020 pushed many Americans to question the purpose of corporations. Global geopolitics like the war in Ukraine and the Israel-Palestine conflict have only further galvanized consumers to press corporations to make a stand.

Many corporations increasingly turned to a stakeholder model of corporate governance, which equally weighs and prioritizes the interests of all people affected by corporate activity — investors, employees, and the communities in which they operate. Consumers’ focus on environmental, social, and governance (ESG) partly drove that shift, but so did regulations like the SEC’s new Climate Disclosure Rules, which up the ante on accountability.

The 2023 adoption of the universal proxy rules also gave shareholders a new voice in the boardroom. That rule put shareholders’ director nominations on the same proxy card as the corporations’ nominations, affirming shareholders’ power to influence decision-making.

2024: The history of corporate governance in the making

In 2024, boards of corporations and organizations of all sizes are finding that the best way for them to protect themselves, their shareholders and their stakeholders is to use technology to their advantage by taking a centralized approach to governance that helps boards put their best foot forward. However, the history of corporate governance continues to be rewritten. How we define corporate governance will continue to evolve in the coming years. See our list of top corporate governance trends for 2024 and beyond to master the current governance landscape and the changes that may be on the horizon.

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