{"title":"CEO individualism and corporate innovation","authors":"Fan Zhang","doi":"10.1108/cafr-12-2023-0149","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"PurposeThis paper aims to study the impact of CEOs' cultural background on corporate innovation. The paper constructs a measure of CEOs' cultural individualism based on their birthplaces and investigates its relationship with firms' patents and citations. The study aims to shed light on the interaction of culture and corporate decisions and focuses on the role of top managers. The paper also investigates the mechanism of how top management can affect corporate innovation output.Design/methodology/approachThe paper constructs the measure of individualism using the westward expansion in US history. To do so, the paper uses the US county-level duration of exposure of the frontier territory in the 19th century and links the counties to CEOs' birthplaces. The paper argues the cultural characteristics of birthplaces can affect a person's later management styles and decisions, hence affecting corporate innovation policies. Using regression and difference-in-differences estimations, the paper explores the relation and causality between cultural individualism and innovation output.FindingsThe paper finds that CEO cultural individualism is positively related with the number of patents produced by the firm and the citations received by the firm. Difference-in-differences tests using CEO turnovers support that the relation is causal. The paper also investigates the economic mechanism of how individualistic CEOs achieve such results. It finds that individualistic CEOs tend to hire more talented employees and improve the workplace environment to attract top inventors.Originality/valueThis paper provides firm-level evidence of culture and innovation. Prior studies in this area focus on cross-country evidence and suffer the limitation of confounding factors. Using a county-level measure of individualism and a sample of firms in USA, the paper alleviates the concern and provides evidence with better granularity. This paper also provides a novel mechanism for attracting top inventors, while existing literature tend to focus on risk-taking activities.","PeriodicalId":248971,"journal":{"name":"China Accounting and Finance Review","volume":"119 41","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2024-07-08","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"China Accounting and Finance Review","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1108/cafr-12-2023-0149","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
PurposeThis paper aims to study the impact of CEOs' cultural background on corporate innovation. The paper constructs a measure of CEOs' cultural individualism based on their birthplaces and investigates its relationship with firms' patents and citations. The study aims to shed light on the interaction of culture and corporate decisions and focuses on the role of top managers. The paper also investigates the mechanism of how top management can affect corporate innovation output.Design/methodology/approachThe paper constructs the measure of individualism using the westward expansion in US history. To do so, the paper uses the US county-level duration of exposure of the frontier territory in the 19th century and links the counties to CEOs' birthplaces. The paper argues the cultural characteristics of birthplaces can affect a person's later management styles and decisions, hence affecting corporate innovation policies. Using regression and difference-in-differences estimations, the paper explores the relation and causality between cultural individualism and innovation output.FindingsThe paper finds that CEO cultural individualism is positively related with the number of patents produced by the firm and the citations received by the firm. Difference-in-differences tests using CEO turnovers support that the relation is causal. The paper also investigates the economic mechanism of how individualistic CEOs achieve such results. It finds that individualistic CEOs tend to hire more talented employees and improve the workplace environment to attract top inventors.Originality/valueThis paper provides firm-level evidence of culture and innovation. Prior studies in this area focus on cross-country evidence and suffer the limitation of confounding factors. Using a county-level measure of individualism and a sample of firms in USA, the paper alleviates the concern and provides evidence with better granularity. This paper also provides a novel mechanism for attracting top inventors, while existing literature tend to focus on risk-taking activities.
本文旨在研究首席执行官的文化背景对企业创新的影响。本文根据首席执行官的出生地构建了一个衡量其文化个人主义的指标,并研究了该指标与企业专利和引文的关系。本研究旨在揭示文化与企业决策之间的互动关系,并重点关注高层管理者的作用。本文还探讨了高层管理者如何影响企业创新产出的机制。为此,本文使用了 19 世纪美国县一级的边疆领土暴露时间,并将各县与 CEO 的出生地联系起来。本文认为,出生地的文化特征会影响一个人日后的管理风格和决策,从而影响企业的创新政策。本文利用回归和差分估计方法,探讨了文化个人主义与创新产出之间的关系和因果关系。研究结果 本文发现,首席执行官的文化个人主义与企业的专利数量和引用次数呈正相关。利用首席执行官更替进行的差异检验证明了这种关系是因果关系。本文还研究了个人主义 CEO 如何取得这些成果的经济机制。研究发现,个人主义的首席执行官倾向于雇佣更多有才华的员工,并改善工作环境以吸引顶尖发明家。该领域的以往研究侧重于跨国证据,存在混杂因素的局限性。本文采用县级个人主义衡量标准和美国企业样本,缓解了这一问题,并提供了更精细的证据。本文还提供了一种吸引顶尖发明家的新机制,而现有文献往往侧重于风险承担活动。