To read this content please select one of the options below:

CEO marital status and capital allocation efficiency

Md Noman Hossain (Finance and Supply Chain Department, College of Business, Central Washington University, Ellensburg, Washington, USA)
Md Nazmul Hasan Bhuyan (Department of Accounting and Finance, North Carolina A&T State University, Greensboro, North Carolina, USA)

International Journal of Managerial Finance

ISSN: 1743-9132

Article publication date: 2 February 2023

Issue publication date: 24 October 2023

297

Abstract

Purpose

The extant literature provides evidence that single CEOs are less risk-averse. Building on the theory of risk aversion, the authors argue that the risk aversion trait arising from CEO’s marital status partially explains capital allocation efficiency. The paper aims to examine the association between CEO marital status and capital allocation efficiency.

Design/methodology/approach

The primary sample includes 9,671 observations from 1,264 US firms. The authors apply multivariate regression and a series of endogeneity tests to examine the association between CEO marital status and capital allocation efficiency.

Findings

Single-CEO firms have higher capital allocation inefficiency than those with married CEOs. The findings continue to hold after a series of endogeneity tests such as propensity score matching, change analysis and instrumental variable regression analysis and are robust to alternative proxies for capital allocation inefficiency. The capital allocation inefficiency in single-CEO firms arises from overinvestment but not underinvestment, and corporate risk-taking channels the effect.

Research limitations/implications

The study is limited to the effect of CEO marital status, not CEO marital quality.

Practical implications

The findings imply that besides information asymmetry and agency conflicts, CEO marital status should receive special attention for capital allocation efficiency. Also, marital status influences the CEOs’ commitment to the general good of society, affecting the potential conflict of interest with different stakeholders from inefficient capital allocation.

Originality/value

This study extends corporate finance literature on CEO marital status by providing novel evidence on the effect of single CEOs on capital allocation efficiency. The authors conclude that CEOs’ personality traits, such as marital status, matter in corporate policy choices.

Keywords

Citation

Hossain, M.N. and Bhuyan, M.N.H. (2023), "CEO marital status and capital allocation efficiency", International Journal of Managerial Finance, Vol. 19 No. 5, pp. 1098-1123. https://doi.org/10.1108/IJMF-10-2021-0531

Publisher

:

Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2023, Emerald Publishing Limited

Related articles