CFO gender and financial statement comparability

  • Fangjun Wang
  • , Zhichao Zhang
  • , L. C.Jennifer Ho
  • , Muhammad Usman

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

11 Scopus citations

Abstract

This study examines the effect of chief financial officers (CFOs) gender on firms' financial statement comparability. Using a sample of Chinese listed firms, we find that firms with female CFOs exhibit higher comparability relative to firms with male CFOs. We further find that the positive relation between having a female CFO and comparability disappears in the industries that are dominated with male CFOs. In additional analyses, we fail to find any significant effects of having female chief executive officers (CEOs) or other female executives on comparability, highlighting the importance of CFOs in the domain of financial reporting decisions. Finally, we show that only in non-male CFO dominated industries, greater comparability is associated with an improvement in analysts' forecast accuracy and dispersion. Overall, our findings are consistent with the view that, due to their innate personality and behavioral differences, female CFOs are likely to exhibit stronger incentives to comply with accounting rules and standards, which in turn improves comparability. We also highlight the uniqueness of comparability by showing that it does not always co-move with reporting quality since it is an inter-firm attribute rather than a firm's own reporting characteristic.

Original languageEnglish
Article number102100
JournalPacific Basin Finance Journal
Volume80
DOIs
StatePublished - Sep 2023

Keywords

  • CFO gender
  • Ethical leadership
  • Financial reporting quality
  • Financial statement comparability
  • Risk-aversion

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'CFO gender and financial statement comparability'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this