1. Women on the Board and Managers’ Pay: Evidence from Spain
- Author
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Juan Francisco Martín-Ugedo, María Encarnación Lucas-Pérez, Juan Samuel Baixauli-Soler, Gregorio Sánchez-Marín, and Antonio Mínguez-Vera
- Subjects
Value (ethics) ,Estimation ,Economics and Econometrics ,Public economics ,Gender diversity ,business.industry ,Compensation (psychology) ,Context (language use) ,Accounting ,Legislature ,General Business, Management and Accounting ,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,Economics ,Business and International Management ,Business ethics ,business ,human activities ,Law ,Diversity (business) - Abstract
The current literature shows great interest in the issue of gender diversity on boards of directors. Some studies have hypothesized a direct relationship between diversity and the value of the firm, but not many examine the intermediate mechanisms that may exert an influence on such relationships. We employ two stages of GMM estimation methodology to exhibit evidences of the relationship between gender diversity and compensation of top managers in the Spanish context. Results show that gender diversity positively affects the effectiveness of boards—in terms of composition, structure, size and functioning—influencing a proper design of top managers compensation linked to company performance. Evidences suggest that legislative actions aimed at increasing the presence of women on boards of directors are justified not only for ethical reasons, but also for reasons of economic efficiency.
- Published
- 2014
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