企业党派定位、极化与风险沟通:考察关于COVID-19的自愿披露

Firm partisan positioning, polarization, and risk communication: Examining voluntary disclosures on COVID ‐19

STRATEGIC MANAGEMENT JOURNAL · 2021
被引 63
人大 AFT50UTD24ABS 4*

中文导读

研究了美国上市公司在COVID-19疫情中的风险披露是否受其政治捐款倾向影响,发现向民主党捐款多的企业更可能自愿披露疫情风险。

Abstract

Research Summary: The COVID-19 pandemic will rank among the greatest challenges many executives will have faced and not only due to the operational challenges it posed. Upon entering the U.S. context, the disease was immediately politically polarized, with clear partisan splits forming in risk perceptions of the disease unrelated to science. We exploit this context to examine whether firms' partisan positioning affects whether and how they communicate risk to their investors on a polarized public policy issue. To do so, we examine the covariation between firms' disclosure of COVID-19 risks and the partisanship of their political giving. Our analysis of earnings call and campaign contribution data for the S&P 500 reveals a positive association between a firm's contributions to Democrats and its disclosure of COVID-19 risks. Managerial Summary: From its onset in the United States, attitudes toward and discourse around the COVID-19 pandemic was heavily politicized and perceptions of the disease's risks were seen as more serious by Democratic-identifying individuals than Republican identifiers. In this study, we examine whether this pattern also holds for U.S. publicly traded firms, who can also stake out a political position through their corporate political action committee campaign contributions. In analyses of earnings call transcripts from the first quarter of 2020, we show that the more Republican-leaning (Democrat-leaning) a firm's campaign contributions are, the less (more) likely it was to voluntarily disclose risks related to COVID-19. We argue that these findings hold implications for parties interested in interpreting firm's risk disclosures on politically polarized issues.

企业政治立场风险披露政治极化COVID-19