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The impact of superstition on corporate tax avoidance: how do CEOs trade off risks associated with tax avoidance?

Guanming He (Department of Accounting, Durham University Business School, Durham, UK)
Dongxiao Shen (Department of Accounting, Durham University Business School, Durham, UK)

Journal of Accounting Literature

ISSN: 0737-4607

Article publication date: 16 September 2024

219

Abstract

Purpose

We examine how superstition shapes corporate tax avoidance and do so by taking a risk perspective and focusing on the zodiac-year belief prevalent in China.

Design/methodology/approach

We adopt a difference-in-differences research design to compare the degree of corporate tax avoidance in the CEOs’ zodiac year with that in the adjacent years. We do propensity-score matching to form a sample of Chinese listed firms for the regression analysis.

Findings

We find causal evidence that firms exhibit a greater magnitude of tax avoidance in the CEOs’ zodiac years, a result attributable to relatively weak tax enforcement in the Chinese context. We also find that the zodiac-year effect on corporate tax avoidance is more pronounced for firms with tight financial constraints, firms with high business risk, firms headquartered in regions with a high degree of superstition and non-state-owned firms.

Originality/value

This study is the first to show that superstition is a determinant factor of tax avoidance and contributes to the tax literature by shedding light on the behavioral risk factors that shape corporate tax avoidance. We take the perspective of CEOs’ risk appetite to analyze how tax avoidance is influenced by the CEOs’ trade-off between the costs and benefits of avoiding taxes. Our results suggest that, when CEOs are more risk-averse, they attach more importance to financial risk than the risk of reputational losses and litigation associated with corporate tax avoidance. The findings imply that tax avoidance can be curbed by increasing (or decreasing) the tax (financial) risk confronting the CEOs.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

We thank Tom Smith and Bruce Vanstone for their support in the review process. We are also grateful to an anonymous reviewer, Scott Dyreng, Christopher Williams, Edward Owens, Michael Guo, Yeqin Zeng, and participants at the 2023 Global Emerging Scholars Research Workshop, the tax concurrent session of 2023 American Accounting Association annual meeting, and the 2023 Northern Advanced Research Training Initiative Annual Conference for their helpful comments and suggestions on the paper. We are accountable for errors, if any, in the paper.

Citation

He, G. and Shen, D. (2024), "The impact of superstition on corporate tax avoidance: how do CEOs trade off risks associated with tax avoidance?", Journal of Accounting Literature, Vol. ahead-of-print No. ahead-of-print. https://doi.org/10.1108/JAL-02-2024-0020

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2024, Emerald Publishing Limited

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