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1 – 2 of 2Riccardo Macchioni, Clelia Fiondella and Martina Prisco
This study aims to examine whether tax avoidance is associated with overinvestment and the moderating role of financial reporting quality on such association in Italian private…
Abstract
Purpose
This study aims to examine whether tax avoidance is associated with overinvestment and the moderating role of financial reporting quality on such association in Italian private firms.
Design/methodology/approach
This study uses a multivariate regression analysis based on a sample consisting of 65,535 firm-year observations between 2015 and 2022.
Findings
Results show that tax avoidance is positively associated with overinvestment and that such relation is weaker for firms with a higher financial reporting quality than for firms with a lower financial reporting quality. Furthermore, findings hold to a wide range of robustness checks, including alternative measures of main variables, endogeneity and falsification tests.
Research limitations/implications
Since this study focuses on the Italian private firms, the results cannot be extensively generalized.
Practical implications
As this study highlights the importance of tax avoidance on overinvestment, it can be particularly beneficial for managers, policymakers and other parties interested in assessing factors that lead to a capital allocation in less efficient investments.
Originality/value
This study provides novel evidence about the role of tax avoidance on overinvestment in private firms by mitigating the little attention of prior research in this area. It examines the Italian setting that is particularly of interest given the relevance of private firms in such context and the incentives of managers to reduce the tax burden.
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Riccardo Macchioni, Martina Prisco and Claudia Zagaria
This paper investigates whether board gender diversity is associated with the propensity to prioritize environmental issues in the material topic list on Global Reporting…
Abstract
Purpose
This paper investigates whether board gender diversity is associated with the propensity to prioritize environmental issues in the material topic list on Global Reporting Initiative (GRI)-based reports.
Design/methodology/approach
Regressions analyses are performed using a sample of 755 firm-year observations from Italy over the 2018–2022 period. The data were obtained from hand-collection on GRI-based reports and Refinitiv Eikon database. Board gender diversity is measured through three proxies: the natural logarithm of the number of women directors, the ratio of female representation on board and the Blau index reflecting the proportion of women/men on board. Additional tests are also developed.
Findings
Results show that board gender diversity positively influences the propensity to rank environmental issues at the top of the material topic list on GRI-based reports.
Research limitations/implications
Since the study focuses on the Italian context, results cannot be subjective to an extensive generalization to other countries.
Practical implications
This study highlights the importance of strengthening the female participation on board to prioritize the firm’s impact on environment within the materiality assessment of sustainability reporting.
Originality/value
To the best of the authors’ knowledge, this study is the first to investigate the association between board gender diversity and the highest ranked environmental material topics, thus contributing to better understand the role of women directors on materiality assessment within sustainability reporting.
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