dc.description.abstract | ABSTRACT
CORPORATE GOVERNANCE – is the relationship among the board of directors, top management, and the shareholders in determining the direction and performance of the corporation. A case study of INDUSTRIAL AND COMMERCIAL DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION (ICDC)
STATING THE PROBLEM – the board of directors exists to protect the interests of the stockholders, so employees may not be represented on the board.
METHODOLOGY – a typical corporation structure consists of three main groups, directors, corporate officers, and shareholders, who are identified in the articles of incorporation.
KEYFINDINGS – when a corporate is first formed, its original owners are usually its first shareholders.
CONCLUSION – a strategy which contradicts an entrenched culture may find itself being quietly, sabotaged by the corporation’s most royal and competent employees.
RECOMMENDATIONS – keep the percentage of insiders typically top management to about 25 percent of less corporation’s membership.
KEYWORDS–Corporate Governance, directors, officers, shareholders. | en_US |