Value of employee satisfaction during the financial crisis

被引:5
|
作者
Cao, Cathy Xuying [1 ]
Chen, Chongyang [2 ]
机构
[1] Seattle Univ, Seattle, WA 98122 USA
[2] Pacific Lutheran Univ, Parkland, WA USA
关键词
Corporate social responsibility; Firm value; Employee satisfaction; Financial flexibility;
D O I
10.1108/MF-10-2015-0288
中图分类号
F8 [财政、金融];
学科分类号
0202 ;
摘要
Purpose - The purpose of this paper is to examine how employee satisfaction affects firm value around the financial crisis. Design/methodology/approach - The authors use the 2008 financial crisis as exogenous shocks to firms to mitigate endogenous concern that employee satisfaction and firm value can be jointly determined. The authors compare firm value of two groups of firms: the firms on the Fortune magazine's list of "100 Best Companies to Work For" and matched firms that are not on the list. The authors employ difference-in-difference approaches in the tests. Findings - The authors find that when the crisis happens, the best companies experience larger decreases in firm value than comparable firms. In addition, such decreases in firm value only exist among the best companies with high financial flexibility. The authors also show that job satisfaction alone does not create firm value during the financial crisis; only when interacted with high financial flexibility, employee satisfaction leads to high firm value. Finally, the authors document that best companies do not have any advantage in the recovery of firm value after the crisis, regardless of their level of financial flexibility. Research limitations/implications - There is considerable debate on whether job satisfaction leads to performance or performance leads to satisfaction (Luthans, 1998). The authors show that the impact of employee satisfaction on firm value changes over time. The authors also identify a crucial factor that impacts the value-creation of employee satisfaction: financial flexibility. The findings suggest that the ambiguous results documented in prior literature can be due to the different sample periods and the failure to identify the impact of financial flexibility in previous studies. Practical implications - The findings provide helpful implications to the business community. The evidence suggests that to reap the benefits of employee satisfaction, companies need to manage their financial flexibility to buffer against potential negative shocks while having strong corporate governance mechanism to mitigate agency concerns. Moreover, the study provides an investment recommendation to socially responsible investment (SRI) and suggests that it is better off implementing dynamic SRI investment strategies according to economic condition. Social implications - The evidence suggests that the economic value of employee satisfaction is related to firms' financial flexibility and economic conditions. Originality/value - The authors contribute to the literature by showing that the impact of employee satisfaction on firm value changes over time. The test design not only allows the authors to study the effect of employee satisfaction on firm value at a particular point in time, but also helps the authors examine the variation in the effect over economic cycles. This paper also contributes to the literature on SRI. The authors identify a crucial factor that impacts the value-creation of employee satisfaction: financial flexibility.
引用
收藏
页码:1208 / 1225
页数:18
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] The influence of corporate social responsibility on employee satisfaction
    Barakat, Simone R.
    Isabella, Giuliana
    Gama Boaventura, Joao Mauricio
    Mazzon, Jose Afonso
    MANAGEMENT DECISION, 2016, 54 (09) : 2325 - 2339
  • [32] Employee Satisfaction and Client Satisfaction in the Banking Sector
    Kaur, Navjot
    Goyal, Pratibha
    Kaur, Manjeet
    INDIAN JOURNAL OF ECONOMICS AND DEVELOPMENT, 2020, 16 (03) : 443 - 448
  • [33] THE SOUTH AFRICAN FINANCIAL SERVICES INDUSTRY: HOW TO USE MOTIVATIONAL FACTORS TO ENSURE EMPLOYEE SATISFACTION
    Rootman, Chantal
    Kruger, Janine
    Matchaba-Hove, Tony
    PROCEEDINGS OF THE 3RD BUSINESS & MANAGEMENT CONFERENCE, 2016, : 209 - 221
  • [34] Hedging operating and financing risk with financial derivatives during the global financial crisis
    Bae, Sung C.
    Kwon, Taek Ho
    JOURNAL OF FUTURES MARKETS, 2021, 41 (03) : 384 - 405
  • [35] Employee satisfaction and stock returns during the COVID-19 Pandemic
    Becker, Mary
    Cardazzi, Alexander
    McGurk, Zachary
    JOURNAL OF BEHAVIORAL AND EXPERIMENTAL FINANCE, 2022, 33
  • [36] The relationship between employee satisfaction and customer satisfaction
    Jeon, Hoseong
    Choi, Beomjoon
    JOURNAL OF SERVICES MARKETING, 2012, 26 (4-5) : 332 - 341
  • [37] Non-financial information uncertainty, firm growth, and market value during crisis: Evidence from China
    Kong, Pengzhi
    Cheng, Louis T. W.
    Pan, Lulu
    Shen, Jianfu
    Yu, Qing
    PACIFIC-BASIN FINANCE JOURNAL, 2025, 91
  • [38] Corporate governance and firm value: evidence from the Korean financial crisis
    Baek, JS
    Kang, JK
    Park, KS
    JOURNAL OF FINANCIAL ECONOMICS, 2004, 71 (02) : 265 - 313
  • [39] PERFORMANCE MANAGEMENT AND EMPLOYEE SATISFACTION
    Jaksic, Milica
    Jaksic, Milos
    MONTENEGRIN JOURNAL OF ECONOMICS, 2013, 9 (01) : 85 - 92
  • [40] TRANSFORMATIONAL LEADERSHIP AND EMPLOYEE SATISFACTION
    Mujkic, Alisa
    Sehic, Dzevad
    Rahimic, Zijada
    Jusic, Jasmin
    EKONOMSKI VJESNIK, 2014, 27 (02): : 259 - 271