Latin America has been surprisingly spared from a generalized wave of
corporate governance scandals. One possible explanation is that the
region's level of investor protection is adequate. The evidence from the
papers in this book says otherwise. The still relatively low level of
protection and transparency has created an environment where problems
cannot be easily detected or are not worth pursuing. These circumstances
have started to push firms thirsty for capital to unilaterally opt for
better corporate governance and alleviate this disadvantage. The papers
in this book constitute the largest firm-level corporate governance
analysis undertaken across Latin American countries. The new datasets in
the book allow the researchers to conclude that companies with better
self-imposed firm-level governance practices or with listing in U.S.
markets are given higher valuations and can raise capital at a lower
cost. Although these results are encouraging, they point to a rocky path
for the future growth of local Latin American capital markets.