Learning from Toyota's troubles: The debate on board oversight, board structure, and director independence in Japan

No Thumbnail Available

Authors

Aronson, Bruce E.

Issue Date

2010

Volume

15

Issue

30

Type

Journal Article
Article

Language

eng_US

Keywords

Business associations , Japan

Research Projects

Organizational Units

Journal Issue

Alternative Title

Abstract

This article considers the potential significance of Toyota’s recent troubles for Japanese corporate governance by examining two sets of issues. First, it looks at the relevant fiduciary duty of Toyota’s directors, i.e., the general duty of oversight in Japan as set forth in case law in the Daiwa Bank shareholder derivative litigation (2000) and the related subsequent statutory duty to establish a system of internal controls provided in the Companies Act (2005). Potential director liability would depend on the filing of a shareholders derivative suit and the discovery of facts which show director’s negligence in devising, implementing, and monitoring specific measures to carry out the board’s existing overall policy on internal controls.
Second, it considers the Toyota case in light of the ongoing debate in Japan during the last decade between competing board structures: the traditional company auditor (kansayaku) structure with no required outside directors and the newer alternative board committee structure with a required majority of outside directors. The potential role of independent directors remains controversial and is currently the hottest topic in Japanese corporate governance. The recent failures of Toyota, a highly successful champion of the traditional Japanese governance system, might help make Japan more receptive to calls by international and domestic institutional investors to take measures to increase board independence.

Description

Citation

Bruce E. Aronson, Learning from Toyota's Troubles: The Debate on Board Oversight, Board Structure, and Director Independence in Japan. J. Japanese L., Fall 2010, at 67.

Publisher

License

Journal

Volume

Issue

PubMed ID

DOI

Identifier

Additional link

ISSN

EISSN