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Why Some Firms Thrive While Others Fail: Governance and Management Lessons from the Crisis

Author

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  • Stanton, Thomas H.

    (Johns Hopkins University)

Abstract

Why did some firms weather the financial crisis and others not? This book builds on the author's interviews and access to internal documents from over a dozen major financial companies, investigates their workings, reveals what went wrong and discovers a remedy. A critical difference between successful and unsuccessful firms is a culture that encourages respectful challenge, what the book calls "constructive dialogue. " At successful firms top management engaged in constructive dialogue with the board, a strong management team, and the chief risk officer, among others, in making a decision; firms that failed often featured overbearing (or distracted) CEOs or unit heads, supine boards, incapable management, ineffective risk officers, and poor communications both across silos and up the hierarchy. They often lacked ability to manage the firm as an integrated organization. Companies need good management, and not only good risk management, to stay out of trouble. Successful companies operated with strong information systems and a culture of good communications that brought issues promptly to top management so the company could adjust its operations accordingly. Successful managers had discipline to ask simple questions and pursue answers until they understood the risk-reward tradeoffs in their activities. Regulators too made mistakes. They didn't feel empowered to rein in companies that - at least before the crisis - seemed so profitable. Instead of waiting for a company to take losses, the book recommends that they use "constructive dialogue " as a test of good management and that supervisors require evidence that major business decisions result from a robust process rather than merely the will of a powerful CEO or heads of revenue-producing units. Companies in turn should use their regulator as a potential source of useful feedback. The book concludes by looking at major firms in other industries and finds that its conclusions apply to these companies too. Available in OSO: http://www.oxfordscholarship.com/oso/public/content/economicsfinance/9780199915996/toc.html

Suggested Citation

  • Stanton, Thomas H., 2012. "Why Some Firms Thrive While Others Fail: Governance and Management Lessons from the Crisis," OUP Catalogue, Oxford University Press, number 9780199915996.
  • Handle: RePEc:oxp:obooks:9780199915996
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    Cited by:

    1. Muazu Hassan Muazu & Rosmaini Tasmin, 2017. "Operational Excellence in Manufacturing, Service and the Oil & Gas: the Sectorial Definitional Constructs and Risk Management Implication," TraektoriĆ¢ Nauki = Path of Science, Altezoro, s.r.o. & Dialog, vol. 3(9(26)), pages 3001-3008, September.
    2. Metrick, Andrew, 2021. "Stress Tests and Policy," Journal of Financial Crises, Yale Program on Financial Stability (YPFS), vol. 3(1), pages 1-19, April.
    3. Thomas H. Stanton, 2015. "The growing movement for enterprise risk management in government: the United States begins to catch up," Asia Pacific Journal of Public Administration, Taylor & Francis Journals, vol. 37(3), pages 182-192, September.
    4. Michelle L. Barnes & James Bohn & Cynthia Martin, 2015. "A post-mortem of the life insurance industry's bid for capital during the financial crisis," Current Policy Perspectives 15-8, Federal Reserve Bank of Boston.

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