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The influence of CEO political ideology on labor relations and firm value

Dongnyoung Kim (Finance, College of Business Administration, California State University San Marcos, San Marcos, California, USA)
Inchoel Kim (Economics and Finance, Robert C Vackar College of Business and Entrepreneurship, The University of Texas Rio Grande Valley, Edinburg, Texas, USA)
Thomas M. Krueger (Accounting and Finance, Texas A & M-Kingsville, Kingsville, Texas, USA)
Omer Unsal (Finance, Merrimack College Girard School of Business and International Commerce, North Andover, Massachusetts, USA)

Managerial Finance

ISSN: 0307-4358

Article publication date: 29 April 2021

Issue publication date: 12 August 2021

484

Abstract

Purpose

This article aims to examine the influence of chief executive officer (CEO) internal political beliefs on labor relations. Prior research has paid little attention to channels through which the internal personal value system of managers enhances or deteriorates firm value. The authors provide evidence consistent with CEOs adopting labor policies impacting incumbent management–labor relationships based upon their political ideologies.

Design/methodology/approach

The research design tests the impact of CEO political ideology on labor relation using an individual CEO’s personal information and firm affiliation, employee lawsuit information, financial contributions to candidates and committees, and firm financial information. The authors compiled a sample of 4,354 unique CEOs from 2,558 US firms that are covered by ExecuComp and used 18,404 firm-year observations for the study’s analysis. A Heckman two-stage estimation process is used to address a potential sample selection bias and match the requirements of exclusion and relevance criteria.

Findings

Findings indicate that firms led by Republican-leaning CEOs are more likely to be sued by their employees, especially for violating union rights. Moreover, the findings of the study uncovered that Republican-leaning CEOs have fewer cases dismissed or withdrawn compared to Democrat-leaning CEOs and are also less likely to settle court cases prior to trial. Results indicate that Republican-leaning CEOs are associated with more substantial decreases in firm value compared to Democrat-leaning CEOs when facing labor allegations. The authors further show that firm value is lower for all firms facing litigation, with the magnitude of the decrease being more pronounced for firms with Republican CEOs.

Research limitations/implications

Firm affiliations are identified using ExecuComp, employee lawsuit information from the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB), financial contributions to candidates and committees from the Federal Election Committee (FEC) website, and financial information from Compustat. To the extent that these websites are inaccurate, such as financial contributions being underreported, the findings reported here may understate the relationships reported in this article.

Practical implications

The authors capture CEO political ideology using political contributions. There may be other means, such as physical space and personal effort, by which one could also estimate the party and intensity of CEO political ideology. This information is unavailable.

Social implications

While presidential politics has four-year cycles, managerial finance is a daily activity. While political affiliation is most clearly measurable through monetary contributions, one can see implications of manager political leaning through their relationship with labor throughout the election cycle.

Originality/value

The analyses of this study indicate that labor unions are more likely to sponsor lawsuits and stronger allegations in firms with Republican CEOs and show that withdrawal, settlement or dismissal rates are lower when firms are managed by Republican managers, resulting in higher subsequent legal costs and potentially damaged employee morale. Also, this paper investigates whether lawsuits have a greater negative consequence on firm value when the firm is run by a Republican CEO. The authors find that lawsuits significantly lower Tobin's Q for Republican-led firms compared to companies with Democratic and apolitical CEOs. The authors further show that firm value is lower for all firms facing litigation, with the magnitude of the decrease being more pronounced for firms with Republican CEOs.

Keywords

Citation

Kim, D., Kim, I., Krueger, T.M. and Unsal, O. (2021), "The influence of CEO political ideology on labor relations and firm value", Managerial Finance, Vol. 47 No. 9, pp. 1300-1319. https://doi.org/10.1108/MF-09-2020-0471

Publisher

:

Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2021, Emerald Publishing Limited

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