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Are all female directors equal? Incentives and effectiveness of female independent directors

We examine how differences in the career incentives of female directors impact their monitoring effectiveness in the context of financial reporting. We find that female independent directors who are sitting senior executives in other firms (executive FIDs) improve financial reporting quality while o...

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Published in:Journal of banking & finance 2024-05, Vol.162, p.107110, Article 107110
Main Authors: Cao, Zhiyan, Upadhyay, Arun, Zeng, Hongchao
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Language:English
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Upadhyay, Arun
Zeng, Hongchao
description We examine how differences in the career incentives of female directors impact their monitoring effectiveness in the context of financial reporting. We find that female independent directors who are sitting senior executives in other firms (executive FIDs) improve financial reporting quality while other female independent directors (non-executive FIDs) do not. Exogenous departure of executive FIDs leads to deterioration of financial reporting quality. Empirical approaches addressing reverse causality and selection problems support our primary findings. We also find that executive FIDs who are younger or not CEOs are more effective in improving financial reporting quality. These findings support the notion that varying career incentives of female directors contribute to the differences in their board monitoring performance. Finally, executive FIDs’ effective monitoring of financial reporting is more prominent in firms with higher monitoring costs and when they serve on more prestigious boards.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.jbankfin.2024.107110
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source ScienceDirect Freedom Collection 2022-2024
subjects Board gender diversity
Board monitoring effectiveness
Career incentives
Female directors
Financial reporting quality
Primary profession
title Are all female directors equal? Incentives and effectiveness of female independent directors
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