Does gender matter: The effects of CEO gender, board composition, and top management composition on risk-taking, capital allocation, and profitability of PSE-listed firms

This paper empirically examines the relationship between gender and corporate choices. Specifically this paper finds and examines the effects of chief executive officer (CEO) gender, and female presence in the board of directors (BODs) and top management officers on leverage, capital allocation, and...

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Main Authors: Agudo, Joie Faith, Francisco, Daniel Joshua, Kung, Hans Nathan, Valdivieso, Patricia Isabel
Format: text
Language:English
Published: Animo Repository 2017
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Online Access:https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/etd_bachelors/10067
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Institution: De La Salle University
Language: English
id oai:animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph:etd_bachelors-10712
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spelling oai:animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph:etd_bachelors-107122021-10-05T05:55:06Z Does gender matter: The effects of CEO gender, board composition, and top management composition on risk-taking, capital allocation, and profitability of PSE-listed firms Agudo, Joie Faith Francisco, Daniel Joshua Kung, Hans Nathan Valdivieso, Patricia Isabel This paper empirically examines the relationship between gender and corporate choices. Specifically this paper finds and examines the effects of chief executive officer (CEO) gender, and female presence in the board of directors (BODs) and top management officers on leverage, capital allocation, and profitability. 159 PSE-listed firms represent the sample. Through conducting comparison of means test and fixed effects estimation, this paper successfully establishes a link between managerial traits, such as gender, and differences in firms leverage, capital allocation, and profitability. The findings show that, first, women presence in top management motivates higher leverage and lower capital allocation, while only firm characteristics lead to changes in firms return on assets. Second, on average, only the risk taking of male and female CEOs and directors vary. And lastly, on average, woman presence in top management officers causes variations in risk taking, capital allocations, and return on assets. 2017-01-01T08:00:00Z text https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/etd_bachelors/10067 Bachelor's Theses English Animo Repository Women chief executive officers--Philippines Capital budget--Sex differences--Philippines Profit--Sex differences--Philippines
institution De La Salle University
building De La Salle University Library
continent Asia
country Philippines
Philippines
content_provider De La Salle University Library
collection DLSU Institutional Repository
language English
topic Women chief executive officers--Philippines
Capital budget--Sex differences--Philippines
Profit--Sex differences--Philippines
spellingShingle Women chief executive officers--Philippines
Capital budget--Sex differences--Philippines
Profit--Sex differences--Philippines
Agudo, Joie Faith
Francisco, Daniel Joshua
Kung, Hans Nathan
Valdivieso, Patricia Isabel
Does gender matter: The effects of CEO gender, board composition, and top management composition on risk-taking, capital allocation, and profitability of PSE-listed firms
description This paper empirically examines the relationship between gender and corporate choices. Specifically this paper finds and examines the effects of chief executive officer (CEO) gender, and female presence in the board of directors (BODs) and top management officers on leverage, capital allocation, and profitability. 159 PSE-listed firms represent the sample. Through conducting comparison of means test and fixed effects estimation, this paper successfully establishes a link between managerial traits, such as gender, and differences in firms leverage, capital allocation, and profitability. The findings show that, first, women presence in top management motivates higher leverage and lower capital allocation, while only firm characteristics lead to changes in firms return on assets. Second, on average, only the risk taking of male and female CEOs and directors vary. And lastly, on average, woman presence in top management officers causes variations in risk taking, capital allocations, and return on assets.
format text
author Agudo, Joie Faith
Francisco, Daniel Joshua
Kung, Hans Nathan
Valdivieso, Patricia Isabel
author_facet Agudo, Joie Faith
Francisco, Daniel Joshua
Kung, Hans Nathan
Valdivieso, Patricia Isabel
author_sort Agudo, Joie Faith
title Does gender matter: The effects of CEO gender, board composition, and top management composition on risk-taking, capital allocation, and profitability of PSE-listed firms
title_short Does gender matter: The effects of CEO gender, board composition, and top management composition on risk-taking, capital allocation, and profitability of PSE-listed firms
title_full Does gender matter: The effects of CEO gender, board composition, and top management composition on risk-taking, capital allocation, and profitability of PSE-listed firms
title_fullStr Does gender matter: The effects of CEO gender, board composition, and top management composition on risk-taking, capital allocation, and profitability of PSE-listed firms
title_full_unstemmed Does gender matter: The effects of CEO gender, board composition, and top management composition on risk-taking, capital allocation, and profitability of PSE-listed firms
title_sort does gender matter: the effects of ceo gender, board composition, and top management composition on risk-taking, capital allocation, and profitability of pse-listed firms
publisher Animo Repository
publishDate 2017
url https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/etd_bachelors/10067
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