But the fact that we need to remember is that nonprofit organizations has no dominant ownership. Therefore effective resource utilization has to be guaranteed to not only sustain their business but also to be successful as nonprofit organizations in the field (Fama & Jensen, 1983), and Fama and Jensen (1983) suggest monitoring the agent as one of major board roles in nonprofit organizations. Usually in nonprofit organizations, we consider the agent is executive director of the organization and the principal is the board member. As it mentioned with assumptions above, the agent, executive director in the nonprofit organizations, is just like other people, who chase their own interests and benefit, so that someone should monitor the agent to prevent situations of moral hazard, and someone is the principal, the board members (Napoli, 2012). For agency theory to explain the monitoring role of the board, there are three essential requirement (Miller, 2002, p. 434); “the board must recognize the chief executive’s potential for self-interested behavior,” “members of the board must agree as to whom the organizations is accountable,” “the board must understand the full range of programs and services that the organization officers, as well as the relative contribution of each toward achieving the …show more content…
To emphasize this role, Fama and Jensen (1983) argued that “the common apex of decision control systems of organizations is some board of directors. Such boards always have the power to hire, fire, and compensate the top-level decision managers and to ratify and monitor important decisions. Exercise of these top level decision control rights by a group helps ensure separation of decision management and control.” (p. 311) More specifically, Miller (2002) empirically studied 12 monitoring cases of nonprofit board directors, and she concluded that boards can monitor administrative actions by going through the process of determining ownership, and she said “Ownership groups bring with them a set of performance expectations that they can integrate into the organizational assessment process. The board can further use these performance expectations to establish evaluation criteria. In this way, the board can effectively monitor executive action to assure that managerial behavior is consistent with owner expectations.” (p.