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Female board representation, corporate innovation, and firm performance

Female board representation, corporate innovation, and firm performance
Female board representation, corporate innovation, and firm performance
We show evidence that female board representation is associated with greater innovative success, and thus enhances firm performance in innovation-intensive industries. Firms with female directors tend to invest more in innovation and obtain more patents and citations for given R&D expenditures. An increase of 10 percentage points in the tenure-weighted fraction of female directors is associated with approximately 6% more patents and 7% more citations. Investigating the underlying mechanisms, the positive association between female board representation and corporate innovation is stronger when product market competition is lower and when managers are more entrenched, consistent with increased monitoring by female directors improving managers’ incentives to innovate. Furthermore, we find that female board representation is positively associated with performance only for firms for which innovation and creativity play a particularly important role.
female board representation, board of directors, corporate innovation, firm performance
0927-5398
236-254
Chen, Jie
7181526d-ec25-480e-a35e-37bf4616e131
Leung, Woon Sau
73a8bf54-6035-4f11-a9ec-74272abbacb5
Evans, Kevin
5a8ae844-c282-45fc-9def-dd52db4a8eb1
Chen, Jie
7181526d-ec25-480e-a35e-37bf4616e131
Leung, Woon Sau
73a8bf54-6035-4f11-a9ec-74272abbacb5
Evans, Kevin
5a8ae844-c282-45fc-9def-dd52db4a8eb1

Chen, Jie, Leung, Woon Sau and Evans, Kevin (2018) Female board representation, corporate innovation, and firm performance. Journal of Empirical Finance, 48, 236-254. (doi:10.1016/j.jempfin.2018.07.003).

Record type: Article

Abstract

We show evidence that female board representation is associated with greater innovative success, and thus enhances firm performance in innovation-intensive industries. Firms with female directors tend to invest more in innovation and obtain more patents and citations for given R&D expenditures. An increase of 10 percentage points in the tenure-weighted fraction of female directors is associated with approximately 6% more patents and 7% more citations. Investigating the underlying mechanisms, the positive association between female board representation and corporate innovation is stronger when product market competition is lower and when managers are more entrenched, consistent with increased monitoring by female directors improving managers’ incentives to innovate. Furthermore, we find that female board representation is positively associated with performance only for firms for which innovation and creativity play a particularly important role.

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 18 July 2018
e-pub ahead of print date: 23 July 2018
Published date: 31 July 2018
Keywords: female board representation, board of directors, corporate innovation, firm performance

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 484608
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/484608
ISSN: 0927-5398
PURE UUID: b8d7a2a7-2607-4a62-9561-366ae781b3f0
ORCID for Woon Sau Leung: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-0389-2126

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 17 Nov 2023 18:01
Last modified: 18 Mar 2024 04:17

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Contributors

Author: Jie Chen
Author: Woon Sau Leung ORCID iD
Author: Kevin Evans

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