2018
DOI: 10.1016/j.jbankfin.2018.02.015
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The performance effects of gender diversity on bank boards

Abstract: Abstract:Previous literature has shown mixed results on the role of female participation on bank boards and bank performance: some find that more women on boards enhance financial performance, while others find negative or no effects. Applying Instrumental Variables methods to data on approximately 90 US bank holding companies over the 1999-2015 period, we argue that these inconclusive results are due to the fact that there is a non-linear, U-shaped relationship between gender diversity on boards and various m… Show more

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Cited by 168 publications
(174 citation statements)
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“…Recent studies have tested for the presence of a nonlinear relationship between board gender diversity and bank financial performance. Farag and Mallin () and Owen and Temesvary (), respectively, find that a threshold of women on bank boards increases profitability or reduces financial fragility. It is important to note that these results are based on a different bank sample but suggest that the nonlinear linkage persists regardless of the geographical context.…”
Section: Literature Review and Hypothesesmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 2 more Smart Citations
“…Recent studies have tested for the presence of a nonlinear relationship between board gender diversity and bank financial performance. Farag and Mallin () and Owen and Temesvary (), respectively, find that a threshold of women on bank boards increases profitability or reduces financial fragility. It is important to note that these results are based on a different bank sample but suggest that the nonlinear linkage persists regardless of the geographical context.…”
Section: Literature Review and Hypothesesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Apart from region and industry effects, a possible explanation for these varying results might be the presence of a nonlinear relationship between female participation on boards and environmental performance (Owen & Temesvary, ). A common feature to all the studies mentioned above is the inclusion of the percentage of female directors on the board as an explanatory variable without including the square of this variable to allow for a curvilinear link.…”
Section: Literature Review and Hypothesesmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…We check for this type of hiring dynamic in our data in Section 6 and …nd a similar pattern: the probability of hiring a new female director increases significantly when a current female director leaves and is negatively a¤ected by the number of women already on the board. There is some evidence within the banking sector that questions this hiring practice: using data on U.S. bank holding companies, Owen and Temesvary (2018) document a nonlinear relationship between gender diversity on boards and various measures of bank performance: adding more women to the board improves overall performance only if there is already at least one woman on the board. Adams and Ferreira (2009) …nd that female directors are better monitors: they have better attendance, participate in more committees, and the CEOs of their companies have more variable pay.…”
Section: Diversity In Publicly Held Company Boards and In The Financimentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Host capital rules and bank traits: Scale and (risk) management quality mitigates arbitrage. Insofar as higher capitalization and asset size correspond to better (quality) management and risk-diversification expertise (for a review on the related literature, see Owen and Temesvary 2018), I expect to find that these characteristics mitigate the extent to which banks substitute from affiliate toward cross-border activities after a tightening in host country capital regulations. I find that better capitalization indeed mitigates capital rule arbitrage in all types of foreign activities, while asset size reduces arbitrage in affiliate activities.…”
Section: Hypothesis Development: Expected Regulatory Effectsmentioning
confidence: 99%