Growing up under Mao and Deng: On the ideological determinants of corporate policies
Historically, economic activities have been organized around certain ideologies. We investigate the impact of politicians’ ideology on corporate policies by exploring a unique setting of ideological change—China from Mao to Deng around the 1978 economic reform—in a regression discontinuity framework...
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sg-smu-ink.lkcsb_research-77952023-12-13T10:33:02Z Growing up under Mao and Deng: On the ideological determinants of corporate policies LIANG, Hao WANG, Rong ZHU, Haikun Historically, economic activities have been organized around certain ideologies. We investigate the impact of politicians’ ideology on corporate policies by exploring a unique setting of ideological change—China from Mao to Deng around the 1978 economic reform—in a regression discontinuity framework. We find that the age discontinuity of politicians around 18 years old in 1978, who had already joined the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) or joined soon thereafter and later became municipal paramount leaders, has had a lasting effect on contemporary firm- and city-level policies. In particular, firms in cities with mayors that joined the CCP under the ideological regime of Mao have made more social contributions, lowered within-firm pay inequality, and engaged in less internationalization than those under Deng’s regime. These effects are stronger in firms with political connections, in non-state-owned enterprises, and in regions that are more market-oriented and not “revolutionary bases.” We find further evidence that ideology-induced corporate policy biases have some impact on firm performance and valuation. 2023-06-01T07:00:00Z text application/pdf https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/lkcsb_research/6796 https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/context/lkcsb_research/article/7795/viewcontent/Ideology_20230611.pdf http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ Research Collection Lee Kong Chian School Of Business eng Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University Political ideology political connection corporate policy China Asian Studies Corporate Finance Finance and Financial Management |
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Political ideology political connection corporate policy China Asian Studies Corporate Finance Finance and Financial Management LIANG, Hao WANG, Rong ZHU, Haikun Growing up under Mao and Deng: On the ideological determinants of corporate policies |
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Historically, economic activities have been organized around certain ideologies. We investigate the impact of politicians’ ideology on corporate policies by exploring a unique setting of ideological change—China from Mao to Deng around the 1978 economic reform—in a regression discontinuity framework. We find that the age discontinuity of politicians around 18 years old in 1978, who had already joined the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) or joined soon thereafter and later became municipal paramount leaders, has had a lasting effect on contemporary firm- and city-level policies. In particular, firms in cities with mayors that joined the CCP under the ideological regime of Mao have made more social contributions, lowered within-firm pay inequality, and engaged in less internationalization than those under Deng’s regime. These effects are stronger in firms with political connections, in non-state-owned enterprises, and in regions that are more market-oriented and not “revolutionary bases.” We find further evidence that ideology-induced corporate policy biases have some impact on firm performance and valuation. |
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LIANG, Hao WANG, Rong ZHU, Haikun |
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LIANG, Hao WANG, Rong ZHU, Haikun |
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LIANG, Hao |
title |
Growing up under Mao and Deng: On the ideological determinants of corporate policies |
title_short |
Growing up under Mao and Deng: On the ideological determinants of corporate policies |
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Growing up under Mao and Deng: On the ideological determinants of corporate policies |
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Growing up under Mao and Deng: On the ideological determinants of corporate policies |
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Growing up under Mao and Deng: On the ideological determinants of corporate policies |
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growing up under mao and deng: on the ideological determinants of corporate policies |
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Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University |
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2023 |
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https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/lkcsb_research/6796 https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/context/lkcsb_research/article/7795/viewcontent/Ideology_20230611.pdf |
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