Ownership structure, board gender diversity and charitable donation

Purpose This paper aims to examine the effect of ownership structure and board gender diversity on charitable donations for a group of listed electronics companies in Taiwan. Design/methodology/approach Using linear regression analysis, this paper analyses the ownership structure, board gender diver...

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Veröffentlicht in:Corporate governance (Bradford) 2018-07, Vol.18 (4), p.655-670
Hauptverfasser: Lin, Ting-Ling, Liu, Heng-Yih, Huang, Chi-Jui, Chen, Yu-Chiung
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container_end_page 670
container_issue 4
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container_title Corporate governance (Bradford)
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creator Lin, Ting-Ling
Liu, Heng-Yih
Huang, Chi-Jui
Chen, Yu-Chiung
description Purpose This paper aims to examine the effect of ownership structure and board gender diversity on charitable donations for a group of listed electronics companies in Taiwan. Design/methodology/approach Using linear regression analysis, this paper analyses the ownership structure, board gender diversity and charitable donations of 380 Taiwanese electronics companies (2011-2013). Findings While domestic institutional investors, such as domestic mutual funds and corporate investors, take more of agency logic view, it negatively impacts on charitable donations. However, the empirical findings of this paper indicate that board gender diversity with the critical number of female directors was positively related to charitable donation. Thus, it is clear that female directors reaching critical numbers were taking more of a stakeholder view of institutional logic, emphasizing the balance of interests of internal and external stakeholders. Research limitations/implications This paper is limited to selected Taiwanese electronics companies over a two-year time frame, and charitable donations are the only proxy of corporate social responsibility (CSR) activity. The paper suggests that, as predicted by stakeholder theory and critical mass theory, companies with boards composed of at least three female directors make higher charitable donations. Practical implications This paper indicates that female directors on the board should have more voices on the board regarding the necessity and importance of CSR. Originality/value The paper contributes to existing literature by looking into the effects of ownership structure and board gender diversity on charitable donations.
doi_str_mv 10.1108/CG-12-2016-0229
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Design/methodology/approach Using linear regression analysis, this paper analyses the ownership structure, board gender diversity and charitable donations of 380 Taiwanese electronics companies (2011-2013). Findings While domestic institutional investors, such as domestic mutual funds and corporate investors, take more of agency logic view, it negatively impacts on charitable donations. However, the empirical findings of this paper indicate that board gender diversity with the critical number of female directors was positively related to charitable donation. Thus, it is clear that female directors reaching critical numbers were taking more of a stakeholder view of institutional logic, emphasizing the balance of interests of internal and external stakeholders. Research limitations/implications This paper is limited to selected Taiwanese electronics companies over a two-year time frame, and charitable donations are the only proxy of corporate social responsibility (CSR) activity. 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source Emerald Journals; Standard: Emerald eJournal Premier Collection
subjects Boards of directors
Corporate governance
Corporate profits
Donations
Economic models
Electronics industry
Gender
Hypotheses
Institutional investments
International business
International finance
Investors
Legitimacy
Multiculturalism & pluralism
Nonprofit organizations
Ownership
Philanthropy
Reputations
Social responsibility
Stockholders
title Ownership structure, board gender diversity and charitable donation
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