Corporate governance practices and their impact on profitability of nepalese commercial banks
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Abstract
This study examines the impact of corporate governance practices on the profitability
of Nepalese commercial banks in terms of Return on Assets (ROA) and Return on
Equity (ROE) as primary financial performance indicators. The study consists of five
chapters and also relies on theories such as agency theory, stakeholder theory, and
stewardship theory. A census approach was utilized, comparing information from all 20
prevailing commercial banks and 4 merged banks in Nepal for five fiscal years (2075/76
to 2080/81). Governance variables were board size, board independence, gender
diversity, frequency of board meetings, and bank size, which were examined through
descriptive and causal-comparative methods using secondary data sources. The study
will provide policymakers, regulators, and bank managers with lessons on how to
improve governance effectiveness and profitability in emerging economies like Nepal.
The study establishes that board gender diversity significantly improves both ROA and
ROE, complementing studies worldwide that inclusive governance structures result in
improved decision-making and financial health. But independent directors are
negatively related to profitability, suggesting, in the Nepalese context, possibly too
much focus on meeting regulators at the expense of strategic achievement. Moreover,
frequent board meetings appear to have a weak negative relationship with ROE, perhaps
evidencing inefficiencies in governance processes. Board size was not significantly
related to performance, and more populous banks were less profitable, indicating
potential bureaucratic inefficiencies and diseconomies of scale in Nepal's banking
system. The study contributes to the broader debate on corporate governance in
emerging economies by corroborating the utility of qualitative governance practice
such as diversity and good monitoring over rigid structural formulas. It recommends
the application of contextualized governance styles suited to Nepal's regulatory and
cultural environment. The research also calls for further research to incorporate
economic macro indicators and apply longitudinal designs to better capture causality
between governance and financial performance. Lastly, the research offers prescriptive
recommendations for the enhancement of Nepalese banks' financial performance by
applying adaptive and inclusive approaches to governance.
Key Words: Corporate Governance, Profitability, Gender Diversity, Board Structure,
Bank Size.
