Explanation : Corporate governance is a set of processes,
customs, policies, laws, and institutions that
affect the way a corporation is directed,
administered or controlled. Corporate
governance mechanisms consist of internal
and external systems and procedures used to
ensure that the agent (the management of the
corporation) runs the firm for the benefit of
one or more principals (shareholders and
other stakeholders). An important theme of
corporate governance is to ensure the
accountability of a corporation’s management
through mechanisms designed to reduce the
agency problem between managers and
shareholders. In the Anglo-American model
of corporate governance, shareholder wealth
maximization generally holds primacy as the
firm’s goal. Thus, governance devices attempt
to align or ensure that managerial behaviour
and actions pursue this goal. Governance
control mechanisms work through a broad
array of layered and overlapping actions such
as monitoring by the boards of directors,
compensation systems, ownership structure,
takeovers, and government regulations.