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The impact of board gender diversity on narrative disclosure tone—evidence from critical mass theory

The impact of board gender diversity on narrative disclosure tone—evidence from critical mass theory
The impact of board gender diversity on narrative disclosure tone—evidence from critical mass theory
Purpose
The purpose of the study is to investigate the association between board gender diversity and narrative disclosure tone (NDT) and the moderating role of firms with more experienced board members and firms with extended board tenure in this association.

Design/methodology/approach
This study employs ordinary least squares (OLS) regression techniques to estimate the regression models. Results are based on a sample of 1794 firm-year observations from 2010 to 2018 in the UK context. The study's results are robust after mitigating endogeneity problems using propensity score (PSM), entropy balance matching, and instrumental variables analysis.

Findings
The findings of this study indicate that board gender diversity is positively associated with the NDT, which suggests that firms with higher levels of board gender diversity have greater levels of net optimistic tone in their narrative disclosure. Further analyses reveal that the positive association is more pronounced for firms with more experienced board members but less pronounced for firms with extended board tenure. Additional analyses also provide robust empirical evidence that firms with higher levels of board gender diversity have a positive impact on executive directors' NDT. Moreover, the positive link is stronger for firms that have board members with more experience, but it is weaker for firms that have board members with longer tenure.

Originality/value
Our study's findings have significant implications for capital market participants, managers, policymakers, academics, and practitioners worldwide in understanding the implications of narrative disclosures in capital markets.
0737-4607
Dey, Sajal Kumar
efa057ee-6991-4b27-bc6d-5c464fee9739
Dsouli, Ouarda
f9e852f0-43e9-466d-bfe6-38a8af04c988
Bassyouny, Hesham
b7dc8b27-a0a3-4b3c-be6b-17abc38e3087
Dey, Sajal Kumar
efa057ee-6991-4b27-bc6d-5c464fee9739
Dsouli, Ouarda
f9e852f0-43e9-466d-bfe6-38a8af04c988
Bassyouny, Hesham
b7dc8b27-a0a3-4b3c-be6b-17abc38e3087

Dey, Sajal Kumar, Dsouli, Ouarda and Bassyouny, Hesham (2025) The impact of board gender diversity on narrative disclosure tone—evidence from critical mass theory. Journal of Accounting Literature. (doi:10.1108/JAL-03-2024-0054).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Purpose
The purpose of the study is to investigate the association between board gender diversity and narrative disclosure tone (NDT) and the moderating role of firms with more experienced board members and firms with extended board tenure in this association.

Design/methodology/approach
This study employs ordinary least squares (OLS) regression techniques to estimate the regression models. Results are based on a sample of 1794 firm-year observations from 2010 to 2018 in the UK context. The study's results are robust after mitigating endogeneity problems using propensity score (PSM), entropy balance matching, and instrumental variables analysis.

Findings
The findings of this study indicate that board gender diversity is positively associated with the NDT, which suggests that firms with higher levels of board gender diversity have greater levels of net optimistic tone in their narrative disclosure. Further analyses reveal that the positive association is more pronounced for firms with more experienced board members but less pronounced for firms with extended board tenure. Additional analyses also provide robust empirical evidence that firms with higher levels of board gender diversity have a positive impact on executive directors' NDT. Moreover, the positive link is stronger for firms that have board members with more experience, but it is weaker for firms that have board members with longer tenure.

Originality/value
Our study's findings have significant implications for capital market participants, managers, policymakers, academics, and practitioners worldwide in understanding the implications of narrative disclosures in capital markets.

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Accepted_Manuscript_JAL (1) - Accepted Manuscript
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Accepted Manuscript _ JAL
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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 22 August 2025
Published date: 24 September 2025

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 506395
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/506395
ISSN: 0737-4607
PURE UUID: 01c19406-c37e-422d-9424-a6c24e2a6776
ORCID for Hesham Bassyouny: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-7393-3544

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 05 Nov 2025 18:00
Last modified: 06 Nov 2025 03:05

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Contributors

Author: Sajal Kumar Dey
Author: Ouarda Dsouli
Author: Hesham Bassyouny ORCID iD

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