
The governance roles of private equity
- Author
- Sophie Manigart (UGent) , Miguel Meuleman (UGent) and Tom Beernaert
- Organization
- Abstract
- Private equity (PE) investors enhance the governance of portfolio companies by installing high-powered boards, structuring the senior management team, installing reward and performance management systems, and advising the portfolio company. The aim is to reduce agency risks and to increase shareholder value. A growing body of literature investigates the real effects of PE buyouts on their portfolio companies. Empirical evidence suggest that PE buyouts do not consider efficiency improvements as their main value-creating strategy, but PE enhances growth rather than efficiency. Researchers’ understanding of PE’s entrepreneurial growth approach to increase shareholder value is limited to date, although it is known that PE portfolio companies are active innovators and that PE portfolio companies extensively engage in acquisitive growth. Financial performance of PE investors can also be driven by transferring value from other stakeholders to the portfolio company after buyout. Does PE buyout’s shareholder value creation come at the expense of other stakeholders, such as employees or customers, or do they also benefit? PE’s impact on employment and wages in portfolio companies has received considerable attention. The effect depends on the institutional setting and macroeconomic conditions and differs across PE groups and by type of buyout. PE buyouts do improve employees’ safety, well-being, and human capital. Research on the impact of PE on stakeholders other than employees is limited. Industry-specific studies uncovered fine-grained actions and mainly negative effects on various stakeholders beyond shareholders and employees. This highlights the tension between enhancing shareholder value at the expense of stakeholder value. Given the continuous development of practices in the PE industry, the governance roles of PE will remain a fertile ground for academic research.
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Citation
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication: http://hdl.handle.net/1854/LU-8771313
- MLA
- Manigart, Sophie, et al. “The Governance Roles of Private Equity.” Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Business and Management, Oxford University Press, 2022, doi:10.1093/acrefore/9780190224851.013.367.
- APA
- Manigart, S., Meuleman, M., & Beernaert, T. (2022). The governance roles of private equity. In Oxford research encyclopedia of business and management. https://doi.org/10.1093/acrefore/9780190224851.013.367
- Chicago author-date
- Manigart, Sophie, Miguel Meuleman, and Tom Beernaert. 2022. “The Governance Roles of Private Equity.” In Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Business and Management. Oxford: Oxford University Press. https://doi.org/10.1093/acrefore/9780190224851.013.367.
- Chicago author-date (all authors)
- Manigart, Sophie, Miguel Meuleman, and Tom Beernaert. 2022. “The Governance Roles of Private Equity.” In Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Business and Management. Oxford: Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/acrefore/9780190224851.013.367.
- Vancouver
- 1.Manigart S, Meuleman M, Beernaert T. The governance roles of private equity. In: Oxford research encyclopedia of business and management. Oxford: Oxford University Press; 2022.
- IEEE
- [1]S. Manigart, M. Meuleman, and T. Beernaert, “The governance roles of private equity,” in Oxford research encyclopedia of business and management, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2022.
@incollection{8771313, abstract = {{Private equity (PE) investors enhance the governance of portfolio companies by installing high-powered boards, structuring the senior management team, installing reward and performance management systems, and advising the portfolio company. The aim is to reduce agency risks and to increase shareholder value. A growing body of literature investigates the real effects of PE buyouts on their portfolio companies. Empirical evidence suggest that PE buyouts do not consider efficiency improvements as their main value-creating strategy, but PE enhances growth rather than efficiency. Researchers’ understanding of PE’s entrepreneurial growth approach to increase shareholder value is limited to date, although it is known that PE portfolio companies are active innovators and that PE portfolio companies extensively engage in acquisitive growth. Financial performance of PE investors can also be driven by transferring value from other stakeholders to the portfolio company after buyout. Does PE buyout’s shareholder value creation come at the expense of other stakeholders, such as employees or customers, or do they also benefit? PE’s impact on employment and wages in portfolio companies has received considerable attention. The effect depends on the institutional setting and macroeconomic conditions and differs across PE groups and by type of buyout. PE buyouts do improve employees’ safety, well-being, and human capital. Research on the impact of PE on stakeholders other than employees is limited. Industry-specific studies uncovered fine-grained actions and mainly negative effects on various stakeholders beyond shareholders and employees. This highlights the tension between enhancing shareholder value at the expense of stakeholder value. Given the continuous development of practices in the PE industry, the governance roles of PE will remain a fertile ground for academic research.}}, author = {{Manigart, Sophie and Meuleman, Miguel and Beernaert, Tom}}, booktitle = {{Oxford research encyclopedia of business and management}}, isbn = {{9780190224851}}, language = {{eng}}, pages = {{23}}, publisher = {{Oxford University Press}}, title = {{The governance roles of private equity}}, url = {{http://doi.org/10.1093/acrefore/9780190224851.013.367}}, year = {{2022}}, }
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