Do Non-Executive Employees Matter in Curbing Corporate Financial Fraud
Citation
Source Title
ISSN
Faculty
School
Collection
Abstract
Exploiting staggered enactment of employee stock ownership plans (ESOPs) as a quasi-natural shock, we use a difference-in-differences (DiD) approach to investigate whether and how ESOPs mitigate corporate financial fraud in China. We find ESOPs significantly reduce corporate financial fraud. This is because of stock ownership of non-executives rather than executives. The underlying mechanisms are heightened internal monitoring and external monitoring through which ESOPs curb executives’ opportunistic behaviour. Our results are robust to parallel trend test, placebo test, PSM approach, instrument variable test, and considering omitted variable concern, partial observability problem, model specification, stock market crash, and industry effect. Our additional analyses indicate that the effect of ESOPs on corporate financial fraud is more pronounced when firms with weaker corporate governance, poorer information environment, less powerful executives and higher-intensity and broader-based plans. Collectively, our results indicate that ESOPs play a role, as an alternative corporate governance mechanism, in mitigating financial fraud.
Related items
Showing items related by title, author, creator and subject.
-
Wu, F.; Cao, June ; Zhang, X. (2023)Exploiting staggered enactment of employee stock ownership plans (ESOPs) as a quasi-natural shock, we use a difference-in-differences (DiD) approach to investigate whether and how ESOPs mitigate corporate financial fraud ...
-
Dutta, Saurav; Caplan, D.; Marcinko, D. (2014)© 2014 American Accounting Association. All rights reserved. In 2011, Japan was shocked by the revelation of a fraud at one of its most prominent companies, Olympus. What was more shocking was that the fraud was perpetrated ...
-
Sheridan, Terry A. (2010)This qualitative study focuses on recipients of the impression management process engaged in by Australian executives. Goffman’s impression management is viewed as part of daily interaction, in which individuals participate ...