The half‐life of political capital: An examination of the temporal effects of board political connections

IF 6.5 1区 管理学 Q1 BUSINESS Strategic Management Journal Pub Date : 2023-07-01 DOI:10.1002/smj.3536
Ashton Hawk, Debtanu Lahiri, Gonçalo Pacheco‐de‐Almeida
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Abstract

Abstract Research Summary Does corporate political activity (CPA) help sustain performance? Prior literature did not address this question, only whether CPA increases profits—with mixed results over short timescales. We theorize about how political capital affects the regression‐to‐the‐mean of profits through firm and industry persistence mechanisms. Using data on over 6000 firms from 14 democratic countries, we estimate time‐varying, firm‐specific performance persistence coefficients with random‐coefficient models—and profit volatility measures. Triangulating identification methods suggests that the half‐life of political capital is shorter than expected, also compared with other strategy interventions. Political connections are marginally effective at sustaining performance and reducing volatility, delaying profit convergence by only 0.180 years—and with no effect beyond 7 years. Preliminary evidence shows that legislative constraints further curb these modest benefits of CPA. Managerial Summary Corporate political activity (CPA) has an ambiguous impact on firm profits. Yet, it still is a prominent and recurrent firm strategy. Do firms use CPA to sustain existing performance advantages—rather than to create new ones? We show that one type of CPA—the co‐optation of politicians into company boards—does increase the persistence and lowers the volatility of firm performance. However, this effect is surprisingly small: advantages only last 2.4% longer, 7.44 years compared to 7.26 years for politically unconnected firms. Political capital erodes faster than expected, presumably due to political cycles or politically motivated firm strategies that are detrimental to performance. CPA seems less effective at sustaining performance advantages than firm investments in R&D or skilled labor—and has a limited anticompetitive effect.
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政治资本的半衰期:董事会政治关系的时间效应检验
企业政治活动(CPA)是否有助于维持绩效?先前的文献没有解决这个问题,只是CPA是否会增加利润——在短时间内结果好坏参半。我们对政治资本如何通过企业和行业持续机制影响利润回归均值进行了理论化。利用来自14个民主国家的6000多家公司的数据,我们用随机系数模型和利润波动率来估计时变的、公司特定的业绩持久性系数。三角识别方法表明,与其他策略干预相比,政治资本的半衰期比预期的要短。政治关系在维持业绩和减少波动性方面收效甚微,仅将利润趋同推迟0.180年,而且在7年以上没有任何影响。初步证据表明,立法限制进一步抑制了注册会计师的这些适度好处。企业政治活动(CPA)对企业利润的影响是模糊的。然而,它仍然是一个突出的和经常性的企业战略。公司使用注册会计师是为了维持现有的业绩优势,还是为了创造新的优势?我们表明,一种类型的注册会计师——政治家进入公司董事会——确实增加了公司绩效的持久性并降低了波动性。然而,这种影响出奇的小:优势的持续时间仅为2.4%,为7.44年,而与政治无关的公司为7.26年。政治资本的侵蚀速度快于预期,可能是由于政治周期或出于政治动机的企业战略不利于业绩。注册会计师在维持绩效优势方面似乎不如公司在研发或熟练劳动力方面的投资有效,而且反竞争效果有限。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
13.70
自引率
8.40%
发文量
109
期刊介绍: At the Strategic Management Journal, we are committed to publishing top-tier research that addresses key questions in the field of strategic management and captivates scholars in this area. Our publication welcomes manuscripts covering a wide range of topics, perspectives, and research methodologies. As a result, our editorial decisions truly embrace the diversity inherent in the field.
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