Does a CEO’s Cultural Heritage Affect Performance Under Competitive Pressure?

Review of Financial Studies, Vol. 31, No. 1, 2018

58 Pages Posted: 1 Feb 2017 Last revised: 26 Mar 2018

See all articles by Duc Duy Nguyen

Duc Duy Nguyen

Durham University

Jens Hagendorff

King’s College London - King's Business School

Arman Eshraghi

Cardiff Business School

Date Written: December 17, 2016

Abstract

We exploit variation in the cultural heritage across U.S. CEOs who are the children or grandchildren of immigrants to demonstrate that the cultural origins of CEOs matter for corporate outcomes. Following shocks to industry competition, firms led by CEOs who are second- or third-generation immigrants are associated with a 6.2% higher profitability compared with the average firm. This effect weakens over successive immigrant generations and cannot be detected for top executives apart from the CEO. Additional analysis attributes this effect to various cultural values that prevail in a CEO’s ancestral country of origin.

Keywords: CEOs, Cultural values, Competition, Performance, Corporate investments

JEL Classification: G30, M14, Z1

Suggested Citation

Nguyen, Duc Duy and Hagendorff, Jens and Eshraghi, Arman, Does a CEO’s Cultural Heritage Affect Performance Under Competitive Pressure? (December 17, 2016). Review of Financial Studies, Vol. 31, No. 1, 2018, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=2909638

Duc Duy Nguyen

Durham University ( email )

Mill Hill Lane
Durham, Durham DH1 3HP
United Kingdom

HOME PAGE: http://sites.google.com/site/louisnguyen6589/home

Jens Hagendorff (Contact Author)

King’s College London - King's Business School

30 Aldwych
London, WC2B 4BG
United Kingdom

Arman Eshraghi

Cardiff Business School ( email )

Colum Drive
Cardiff, CF10 3EU
United Kingdom

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