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Purpose

While prior research examines the direct effects of board meeting frequency on firm performance, this study aims to examine how board monitoring and advisory roles contingently shape this relationship across institutional contexts.

Design/methodology/approach

Using system generalized method of moments (two-step) on a panel of 308 German and Indonesian firms (2008–2017), the authors analyze how monitoring and advisory roles moderate the board meeting frequency–performance link. Unique hand-collected data on board agendas enable categorization of roles, while the legally mandated two-tier board structure and cross-country design provide a natural experiment for testing institutional contingencies.

Findings

Monitoring roles amplify the negative association between meeting frequency and performance, particularly in strong governance environments (Germany), where excessive oversight may create information asymmetry. Conversely, advisory roles mitigate this effect, facilitating collaborative decision-making, especially in weaker governance environments (Indonesia).

Research limitations/implications

This study challenges the assumption that board effectiveness stems from board meeting frequency alone. Future research should account for the allocation of board roles and institutional fit, particularly in cross-country studies, to avoid oversimplified governance prescriptions.

Practical implications

Governance strategies should prioritize meeting quality over frequency. Overemphasis on monitoring may stifle managerial flexibility, while fostering advisory roles enhances strategic decision-making. Corporate governance codes should be tailored to reflect institutional differences.

Social implications

Enhanced understanding and optimizing board roles can improve governance efficiency and sustainability, reduce agency costs, boost stakeholder outcomes and organizational performance, contributing toward economic stability in developed and emerging markets.

Originality/value

This study’s agenda-based measurement of board roles overcomes self-reporting biases from surveys and establishes institutional context as a boundary condition for governance research. The authors reconcile the “monitoring paradox” by empirically demonstrating when oversight becomes counterproductive. Additionally, this study bridges agency and resource dependence theories by showing how board roles differentially address information asymmetry versus resource provision.

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