Executive cash compensation and tax aggressiveness of Chinese firms

Research output: Journal PublicationArticlepeer-review

25 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

We examine the influence of corporate compensation policies on firms’ tax aggressiveness in an emerging market where executive compensation is primarily in cash form. Based on a hand-collected dataset of 958 firm-year observations of Chinese listed firms for the 2006–2012 period, we find that firms paying higher executive cash compensation are associated with lower tax aggressiveness. This relationship also holds for the excess cash compensation measures which control for executive shareholding, firm profitability, size, growth opportunity, and board independence. We further document that mutual funds ownership pressure firms paying higher compensation to reduce their tax aggressiveness, suggesting adverse selection by mutual funds on firms exhibiting risky tax avoidance activities. High leverage offsets the negative link between cash compensation and tax aggressiveness, indicating a complementary effect between debt and tax avoidance, and, hence, suggesting that creditor monitoring is weak. These results are robust to the system-GMM estimation, which simultaneously account for the endogeneity of executive compensation, tax aggressiveness, ownership and control, leverage, and corporate governance. Our findings on Chinese firms have important policy implications for developing countries around the world with concentrated ownership structure, weak institutional environment, widespread corruption, ineffective rule of law, and ongoing significant social and political transformation.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1151-1180
Number of pages30
JournalReview of Quantitative Finance and Accounting
Volume51
Issue number4
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Nov 2018

Keywords

  • China
  • Executive compensation
  • Leverage
  • Ownership
  • Tax aggressiveness

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Accounting
  • General Business,Management and Accounting
  • Finance

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Executive cash compensation and tax aggressiveness of Chinese firms'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this