The impact of female board directors on effective investment management: evidence from Korean firms

被引:4
|
作者
Kwon, HyukJun [1 ]
Moon, Changjin [2 ]
Kim, Jinhwan [3 ]
机构
[1] Soonchunhyang Univ, Global Business Sch, Econ & Finance Dept, Asan, South Korea
[2] Dongguk Univ, Dept Accounting, Business Sch, Seoul, South Korea
[3] Soonchunhyang Univ, Global Business Sch, Dept Business Adm, Asan, South Korea
来源
GENDER IN MANAGEMENT | 2023年 / 38卷 / 06期
关键词
Gender diversity; Female directors; Corporate governance; Investment efficiency; PRODUCT MARKET COMPETITION; GENDER DIVERSITY; CRITICAL MASS; CORPORATE GOVERNANCE; UNCERTAINTY; PERFORMANCE; WOMEN; RISK; FINANCE; COSTS;
D O I
10.1108/GM-04-2022-0131
中图分类号
F [经济];
学科分类号
02 ;
摘要
Purpose Board gender diversity is an important component of sound corporate governance. This paper aims to examine the influence that female board directors in listed firms in Korea have on effective investment decisions.Design/methodology/approach The authors used 4,117 data items related to finance and governance from FnGuide for listed Korean firms between 2014 and 2019. The authors analyzed the data using Heckman's two-stage regression, controlling the ordinary least square regression and endogeneity, to resolve the problem of selection bias. Gender diversity was measured using the existence/absence of female directors on boards (dummy variable) and the ratio of female directors on boards (BLAUt-1 index and SHANNONt-1 index).Findings Female board directors influenced the suppression of under-investment for the enhancement of corporate value, but not the suppression of over-investment. Additionally, female directors played a complementary role in under-investment to mitigate corporate risk, but not in intra-industry competition. Kanter's classification of board types indicated that the skewed board and tilted board have a significant effect on under-investment and play a complementary role in corporate risk.Research limitations/implications First, this study is about only Korean firms. Second, this study relies on corporate actual data but does not account for the factors that affect human behavior or how such behaviors can evolve. Third, the authors included as many appropriate variables as possible when setting the research model, but there may be missing correlation variables.Social implications The authors' results have policy implications, as they can be used as a basis to establish policies related to gender diversity in Korea, where there are currently insufficient empirical studies on women's participation on the boards of directors. Moreover, with the amended FISCMA, which mandates that firms must hire at least one female director, Korean firms need to implement practical employment policies that can benefit firms, by selecting capable female directors rather than engaging in tokenism.Originality/value This study empirically examines gender diversity in the boards of Korean firms that have implemented the female quota system for the first time and considers female board directors' roles in undertaking effective corporate investment decisions. This insight can guide change management and help firms avoid tokenism - a possible corporate response to pressures arising from the debates about feminism in Korea and gender diversity legislation.
引用
收藏
页码:705 / 729
页数:25
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Impact of female directors on the board and foreign institutional investors on earning manipulation of Chinese listed companies
    Sial, Muhammad Safdar
    Xuan Vinh Vo
    Al-Haddad, Lara
    Thao Nguyen Trang
    ASIA-PACIFIC JOURNAL OF BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION, 2019, 11 (03) : 288 - 300
  • [42] Board of directors' quality and firms' debt financing: the moderating effect of insider ownership - evidence from Omani firms
    Bin-Sariman, Ahmed Sultan
    Ali, Azwadi
    Nor, Mohd Nazli Mohd
    APPLIED ECONOMICS, 2016, 48 (05) : 402 - 410
  • [43] Women on board and performance of family firms: Evidence from India
    Sarkar, Jayati
    Selarka, Ekta
    EMERGING MARKETS REVIEW, 2021, 46
  • [44] Does board diversity reduce the probability of financial distress? Evidence from Chinese firms
    Ali, Shahid
    Ali, Shoukat
    Jiang, Junfeng
    Hedvicakova, Martina
    Murtaza, Ghulam
    FRONTIERS IN PSYCHOLOGY, 2022, 13
  • [45] Female directors and earnings management: Evidence from UK companies
    Arun, Thankom Gopinath
    Almahrog, Yousf Ebrahem
    Aribi, Zakaria Ali
    INTERNATIONAL REVIEW OF FINANCIAL ANALYSIS, 2015, 39 : 137 - 146
  • [46] Board gender diversity and firms' internationalization speed: the role of female directors' characteristics
    Ren, Ge
    Zeng, Ping
    BALTIC JOURNAL OF MANAGEMENT, 2022, 17 (01) : 72 - 88
  • [47] Indebtedness in family-managed firms: the moderating role of female directors on the board
    P. López-Delgado
    J. Diéguez-Soto
    Review of Managerial Science, 2020, 14 : 727 - 762
  • [48] Female Directors and Firm Value: New Evidence from Directors' Deaths
    Schmid, Thomas
    Urban, Daniel
    MANAGEMENT SCIENCE, 2023, 69 (04) : 2449 - 2473
  • [49] Impact of board characteristics on firm dividends: evidence from India
    Sanan, Neeti Khetarpal
    CORPORATE GOVERNANCE-THE INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF BUSINESS IN SOCIETY, 2019, 19 (06): : 1204 - 1215
  • [50] Board diversity and working capital management strategies: evidence from energy sector of Pakistan
    Khan, Ammar Nawaz
    Yahya, Farzan
    Waqas, Muhammad
    JOURNAL OF ECONOMIC AND ADMINISTRATIVE SCIENCES, 2024, 40 (03) : 658 - 672