Would Overconfident CEOs Engage More in Environment, Social, and Governance Investments? With a Focus on Female Representation on Boards

This study examines the relationship between CEO overconfidence, environment, social, and governance investments, and firm value. Drawing on insights from upper echelon and agency theory, greater female representation on boards is expected to act as an independent monitoring mechanism to control and...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Jaehong Lee, Eunsoo Kim
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2021-03-01
Series:Sustainability
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/13/6/3373
id doaj-72536b1f35d4483aa705d7008d7f02a9
record_format Article
spelling doaj-72536b1f35d4483aa705d7008d7f02a92021-03-19T00:04:45ZengMDPI AGSustainability2071-10502021-03-01133373337310.3390/su13063373Would Overconfident CEOs Engage More in Environment, Social, and Governance Investments? With a Focus on Female Representation on BoardsJaehong Lee0Eunsoo Kim1Major in Accounting Taxation, College of Software and Management, Kyonggi University, Suwon 16227, KoreaCollege of Business, Sangmyung University, Seoul 03016, KoreaThis study examines the relationship between CEO overconfidence, environment, social, and governance investments, and firm value. Drawing on insights from upper echelon and agency theory, greater female representation on boards is expected to act as an independent monitoring mechanism to control and reconcile CEO overconfidence which leads to enhancement of corporate value induced by environment, social, and governance investments. Empirical evidence in this study finds that, on average, overconfident managers tend to engage in ESG investments in South Korea. Furthermore, in firms with high environment, social, and governance investments, the negative association between CEO overconfidence and firm value is mitigated, showing that environment, social, and governance investments are effective moderators in controlling and constraining managerial overconfidence. Finally, we find that the joint impact of CEO overconfidence and environment, social, and governance investments on corporate value is distinctive in firms with female board representation. Taken together, we find that negative effects associated with CEO overconfidence can be alleviated by the role of female leadership that links corporate environment, social, and governance investments to firm value.https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/13/6/3373CEO overconfidenceenvironment, social and governance investmentsfemale executivesfirm value
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jaehong Lee
Eunsoo Kim
spellingShingle Jaehong Lee
Eunsoo Kim
Would Overconfident CEOs Engage More in Environment, Social, and Governance Investments? With a Focus on Female Representation on Boards
Sustainability
CEO overconfidence
environment, social and governance investments
female executives
firm value
author_facet Jaehong Lee
Eunsoo Kim
author_sort Jaehong Lee
title Would Overconfident CEOs Engage More in Environment, Social, and Governance Investments? With a Focus on Female Representation on Boards
title_short Would Overconfident CEOs Engage More in Environment, Social, and Governance Investments? With a Focus on Female Representation on Boards
title_full Would Overconfident CEOs Engage More in Environment, Social, and Governance Investments? With a Focus on Female Representation on Boards
title_fullStr Would Overconfident CEOs Engage More in Environment, Social, and Governance Investments? With a Focus on Female Representation on Boards
title_full_unstemmed Would Overconfident CEOs Engage More in Environment, Social, and Governance Investments? With a Focus on Female Representation on Boards
title_sort would overconfident ceos engage more in environment, social, and governance investments? with a focus on female representation on boards
publisher MDPI AG
series Sustainability
issn 2071-1050
publishDate 2021-03-01
description This study examines the relationship between CEO overconfidence, environment, social, and governance investments, and firm value. Drawing on insights from upper echelon and agency theory, greater female representation on boards is expected to act as an independent monitoring mechanism to control and reconcile CEO overconfidence which leads to enhancement of corporate value induced by environment, social, and governance investments. Empirical evidence in this study finds that, on average, overconfident managers tend to engage in ESG investments in South Korea. Furthermore, in firms with high environment, social, and governance investments, the negative association between CEO overconfidence and firm value is mitigated, showing that environment, social, and governance investments are effective moderators in controlling and constraining managerial overconfidence. Finally, we find that the joint impact of CEO overconfidence and environment, social, and governance investments on corporate value is distinctive in firms with female board representation. Taken together, we find that negative effects associated with CEO overconfidence can be alleviated by the role of female leadership that links corporate environment, social, and governance investments to firm value.
topic CEO overconfidence
environment, social and governance investments
female executives
firm value
url https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/13/6/3373
work_keys_str_mv AT jaehonglee wouldoverconfidentceosengagemoreinenvironmentsocialandgovernanceinvestmentswithafocusonfemalerepresentationonboards
AT eunsookim wouldoverconfidentceosengagemoreinenvironmentsocialandgovernanceinvestmentswithafocusonfemalerepresentationonboards
_version_ 1724214827436474368