El objetivo del estudio consiste en analizar la calidad de la información financiera de las empresas españolas, comparando las empresas familiares y las no familiares, y relacionando dicha calidad con las prácticas de gobierno corporativo. Para alcanzar este objetivo se analizó una muestra de 650 empresas españolas durante el período 2011-2016. Con base en la teoría de la agencia y en la literatura sobre la riqueza socioemocional, los resultados muestran una mayor calidad de la información financiera en las empresas familiares, relación que se ve reforzada por los factores de gobierno corporativo. Nuestros resultados son consistentes con la investigación previa y con las premisas de la teoría de agencia, que indican menores asimetrías de información entre propietarios y gestores en el singular contexto de las empresas familiares. Además, nuestro trabajo proporciona evidencia empírica de que la participación de las mujeres en el consejo de administración contribuye a la mayor calidad de la información financiera en las empresas familiares, contribuyendo a explicar la heterogeneidad de las empresas familiares en términos de gestión del resultado contable. El estudio contribuye a cubrir la brecha que existe en la literatura sobre la influencia del contexto de empresa familiar y la influencia de la presencia de las mujeres en el consejo sobre la calidad de la información financiera.The objective of this study is to explore the quality of financial information of Spanish firms, by comparing family firms with non-family firms, and relating this quality with corporate governance practices. For this purpose, a sample of 650 Spanish firms was analysed during the period 2011-2016. Based on agency theory and socioemotional wealth literature, the results show a higher quality of financial information in family firms, a relationship which is reinforced by corporate governance factors. Our results are consistent with the scant previous research, and with the premises of agency theory, which indicate lower asymmetry of information between owners and managers in the singular context of family firms. Additionally, our work provides evidence that the participation of women on the board boosts the quality of financial information in family firms, contributing to the justification of family firm heterogeneity in terms of earnings management. This study contributes to reducing the gap in the literature on the influence of the family business context and the influence of women on the board on the quality of financial reporting.
Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) has long been known as a major cause of hospital-acquired (HA-MRSA) infections worldwide. For the past twenty years, an increasing number of studies have described its emergence in the community as well. In Portugal, a country with a high-prevalence of HA-MRSA, there are only limited data available on the epidemiology of MRSA in the community. We studied the prevalence of S. aureus and MRSA colonization among healthy adults in Portugal. Between February 2015 and December 2016, a longitudinal study was conducted in which 87 adults aged 25–50 years old were followed for six months. For each participant nasopharyngeal, oropharyngeal and saliva samples were obtained monthly and, in some cases, weekly. A total of 1,578 samples (n = 526 for each sampling site) were examined for the presence of S. aureus and MRSA by classical culture-based methods. Fifty-seven adults (65.5%) carried S. aureus at least once during the six months period of the study: 19.5% were persistent S. aureus carriers and 46.0% were intermittent carriers. Carriage rates per sampling site were 20.5% in nasopharynx, 18.3% in oropharynx, and 13.5% in saliva. Simultaneous screening of the three sampling sites increased detection of S. aureus, which overall occurred in 34.4% of the 526 sampling time-points. No MRSA were isolated. In conclusion, this study adds novel information about the MRSA scenario in the Portuguese community. Our results indicate that, in Portugal, MRSA does not seem to circulate among healthy adults without risk factors and therefore this age group does not constitute, at the current time, a reservoir of MRSA in the community.
Transparency is a key factor in ensuring family firms' commercial success and establishing and nurturing trust among stakeholders, including managers and teams. However, transparency appears to depend on business contexts and, more specifically, on family members' involvement in these companies, which helps explain researchers' growing interest in corporate transparency in family firms. This chapter examines the most relevant literature on this topic to provide an integrative overview of studies of transparency practices in family businesses and identify the main research gaps that comprise paths for future investigations. To this end, a non-systematic compilation and review was conducted of 50 related articles published in journals included in the Academic Journal Guide 2021. Content analysis revealed that the majority are based on empirical research focusing on the quality of information disclosed via earnings management. The most significant findings are discussed in this chapter, including research questions to be answered in further studies of this topic.
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