Does Board Gender Diversity really increase Innovation Intensity? Evidence from S&P500 Firms

This study examines whether corporate board gender diversity has positive effect on firm innovation intensity, using a sample of S&P 500 firms from 2010 to 2019. It finds that all results of three panel data models, including Pooled OLS model, Radom Effect (RE) model and Fixed Effect (FE) model,...

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Main Author: PENG, YUE
Format: Dissertation (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/62895/
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author PENG, YUE
author_facet PENG, YUE
author_sort PENG, YUE
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description This study examines whether corporate board gender diversity has positive effect on firm innovation intensity, using a sample of S&P 500 firms from 2010 to 2019. It finds that all results of three panel data models, including Pooled OLS model, Radom Effect (RE) model and Fixed Effect (FE) model, indicate an insignificant association between the gender diversity on boards and intensity of innovation. By conducting a series of tests, the FE model is chosen as the most appropriate model. However, after checking the influence within individual industries, adopting Instrumental Variable (IV) Approach to deal with endogeneity problems and considering the robustness test for lag effect, the percentage of female directors is still not statistically significant with R&D expenditure, R&D expenditure over the number of employees and R&D expenditure over sales. In general, the finding suggests that the board gender diversity does not significantly increase innovation intensity on the basis of this data-set.
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format Dissertation (University of Nottingham only)
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institution University of Nottingham Malaysia Campus
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language English
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publishDate 2020
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spelling nottingham-628952023-04-19T08:48:02Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/62895/ Does Board Gender Diversity really increase Innovation Intensity? Evidence from S&P500 Firms PENG, YUE This study examines whether corporate board gender diversity has positive effect on firm innovation intensity, using a sample of S&P 500 firms from 2010 to 2019. It finds that all results of three panel data models, including Pooled OLS model, Radom Effect (RE) model and Fixed Effect (FE) model, indicate an insignificant association between the gender diversity on boards and intensity of innovation. By conducting a series of tests, the FE model is chosen as the most appropriate model. However, after checking the influence within individual industries, adopting Instrumental Variable (IV) Approach to deal with endogeneity problems and considering the robustness test for lag effect, the percentage of female directors is still not statistically significant with R&D expenditure, R&D expenditure over the number of employees and R&D expenditure over sales. In general, the finding suggests that the board gender diversity does not significantly increase innovation intensity on the basis of this data-set. 2020-12-01 Dissertation (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/62895/1/20159099_BUSI4153%20UNUK_Accounting%20and%20Finance%20Dissertation%20.pdf PENG, YUE (2020) Does Board Gender Diversity really increase Innovation Intensity? Evidence from S&P500 Firms. [Dissertation (University of Nottingham only)] Gender diversity Corporate governance Innovation intensity S&P500 USA
spellingShingle Gender diversity Corporate governance Innovation intensity S&P500 USA
PENG, YUE
Does Board Gender Diversity really increase Innovation Intensity? Evidence from S&P500 Firms
title Does Board Gender Diversity really increase Innovation Intensity? Evidence from S&P500 Firms
title_full Does Board Gender Diversity really increase Innovation Intensity? Evidence from S&P500 Firms
title_fullStr Does Board Gender Diversity really increase Innovation Intensity? Evidence from S&P500 Firms
title_full_unstemmed Does Board Gender Diversity really increase Innovation Intensity? Evidence from S&P500 Firms
title_short Does Board Gender Diversity really increase Innovation Intensity? Evidence from S&P500 Firms
title_sort does board gender diversity really increase innovation intensity? evidence from s&p500 firms
topic Gender diversity Corporate governance Innovation intensity S&P500 USA
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/62895/