服从命令?前军人CEO与财务不当行为

Drilled to obey? Ex‐military CEOs and financial misconduct

STRATEGIC MANAGEMENT JOURNAL · 2018
被引 207
人大 AFT50UTD24ABS 4*

中文导读

研究利用美国证券交易委员会的会计审计执法公告和“幸运赠股”数据,发现具有军队服役经历的CEO更少参与财务欺诈和股票期权回溯,且董事会监督会强化这一关系。

Abstract

Research Summary : We examine the influence of CEOs' military background on financial misconduct using two distinctive datasets. First, we make use of accounting and auditing enforcement releases (AAER) issued by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), which contain intentional and substantial cases of financial fraud. Second, we use a dataset of “lucky grants,” which provide a measure of the likelihood of grant dates of CEOs' stock options having been manipulated. Results for both datasets indicate that CEOs who served in the military are less inclined to be involved in fraudulent financial reporting and to backdate stock options. In addition, we find that these relationships are moderated by board oversight (CEO duality and independent directors in the board). Managerial Summary : CEOs who formerly served in the U.S. military are prevalent among U.S. firms. The military puts strong emphasis on the obedience of its personnel. In this study, we test if time spent in the military leads individuals to be more obedient to rules and regulations in the years after they have left the military and become CEOs. Our findings strongly suggest that CEOs who served in the U.S. military are less likely to be involved in financial misconduct. We also find evidence that tougher board oversight strengthens this relationship. Our findings have implications for regulators, auditors, practitioners, and researchers who are interested in determinants of and mechanisms to prevent fraud and stock option backdating.

公司治理财务欺诈高管背景董事会监督