Collusive versus coercive corporate corruption: evidence from demand-side shocks and supply-side disclosures

Jeong-Bon Kim, Edward Lee, Xiaojian Tang, Junsheng Zhang*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Journal Publications and ReviewsRGC 21 - Publication in refereed journalpeer-review

7 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

We examine whether and how collusive and coercive forms of corporate corruption influence firm value. Our identification strategy exploits (i) the exogenous criminal prosecutions of regional government officials as part of China’s anti-corruption campaign as demand-side shocks and (ii) the unique reporting of entertainment and travel costs by Chinese firms as supply-side disclosure of corruption-related spending. Among firms for which corruption is likely to be perceived as collusive (coercive) by investors, we find that exposure to corruption-related political risk measured by abnormal entertainment and travel costs has a significantly negative (positive) relation with market reactions to the anti-corruption prosecutions. These findings are consistent with investors’ anticipation of a future decline in potential benefits (costs) arising from rent-sharing collusion (rent-extracting coercion). We also find that the collusion (coercion) effect is more pronounced for firms in regions with greater government economic intervention (in industries with stronger business competition). Furthermore, we provide evidence that the ex ante market reactions corroborate with the direction of changes in ex post operating performance of firms. Overall, our results suggest that investors can recognize differences in the economic consequences between collusive and coercive corruption and that the disclosure of corruption-related spending could help investors assess a firm’s exposure to corruption-related risk. © The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature 2022
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1929-1970
JournalReview of Accounting Studies
Volume28
Issue number4
Online published25 Mar 2022
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Dec 2023

Funding

We thank Russell Lundhohm (editor) and the anonymous referee for helpful suggestions and comments. Jeong-Bon Kim acknowledges partial financial support from the GRF grant of the HK SAR government (No. 9042767). Junsheng Zhang thanks financial support from the National Natural Science Foundation of China (No.71790603, No.71672205 and No.72132010) and Xiaojian Tang thanks financial support from the Humanities and Social Sciences Fund of the Ministry of Education of China (No.20YJC790125).

Research Keywords

  • Anti-corruption campaign
  • Corporate corruption
  • Corporate disclosure
  • G14
  • H25
  • K22
  • K42
  • M41
  • Market reactions

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