Female Management Representation and Corporate Financial Fraud: Do Local Gender Norms Play a Role?
Yuehua Xu (),
Vishal K. Gupta (),
Shan Xue (),
Sandra Mortal () and
Honghui Chen ()
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Yuehua Xu: Shandong University, School of Management
Vishal K. Gupta: The University of Alabama
Shan Xue: Northwest University, School of Economics and Management
Sandra Mortal: The University of Alabama
Honghui Chen: Sun Yat-Sen University, School of Business
Journal of Business Ethics, 2025, vol. 202, issue 4, No 9, 802 pages
Abstract:
Abstract The debate over the benefits of female representation in top management is ongoing, with some arguing it enhances decision-making quality by bringing diverse perspectives, while others seeing it as symbolic or even detrimental. To make progress on the debate, this study takes an institutional perspective to develop a theoretical account examining the gender norms that constraining the effect of female representation in top management teams (TMTs) on corporate financial fraud. We offer two main insights: (a) female TMT representation is associated with lower incidence of corporate fraud, and (b) the relationship becomes weaker for firms domiciled in regions with gender inegalitarian norms or gender stereotypical norms that are more gender stratified. Results based on archival data about Chinese public firms, and simultaneous estimation of fraud commitment and detection probabilities, support our predictions. Several alternative econometric specifications, including (but not limited to), instrumental variable analysis and matched sample analysis, enhance confidence in the robustness of our findings. The findings of this study make important contributions to the literatures of managerial diversity, corporate fraud, and institutional norms.
Keywords: Gender and diversity; Organizational misconduct; Top management teams; Institutional norms; Archival (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2025
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DOI: 10.1007/s10551-025-05930-0
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