Do professionals really matter? Top executive legal expertise and firm lawsuits

IF 1.9 4区 管理学 Q3 MANAGEMENT Chinese Management Studies Pub Date : 2023-12-12 DOI:10.1108/cms-06-2022-0215
Peiyuan Huang, Junguang Gao, Wenyuan Cai, Fuzhen Gu
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Abstract

Purpose This study aims to use institutional and upper echelons theories to comprehensively investigate the intricate interplay between TMT legal expertise and firms' adaptive strategies in legal contexts, notably within emerging economies. It explores how upper echelons experiences shape opportunistic compliance strategies, impacting value and risk perceptions. Drawing on upper echelons theory, the research probes how TMT legal expertise molds firms’ involvement in significant lawsuits, accounting for influential roles. It scrutinizes TMT’s impact on legal strategies, positing that managerial discretion emerges from environmental factors, organizational attributes and executive traits. The study underscores TMT’s internal incentives and external factors’ interplay, molding strategic legal engagement. Design/methodology/approach To validate this framework, statistical analysis is performed on data from 2,584 Chinese-listed firms. The data set spans 2010–2015, with 5,713 material lawsuits. Chosen due to reliable institutional-level incentives data from the China Market Index Database, years 2016–2019 are excluded for methodological disparities. Moreover, 2007–2009 is omitted to mitigate the potential financial crisis impact. This study’s 11,272 observations ensure robust empirical exploration, offering insights into the interplay of TMT legal expertise, institutional factors and firms’ legal strategies. Findings The study reveals that firms led by executives with legal expertise are more prone to engage in significant lawsuits, indicating strategic use of legal skills. TMT age moderates this, with older teams less likely to engage. TMT tenure’s effect remains unclear due to tenure-risk preference complexity. Institutional factors matter; less legally mature regions reduce managers’ legal risk intention. Results confirm hypotheses and highlight executive human capital’s impact on firms’ legal strategies. Research limitations/implications This study acknowledges contributions while highlighting limitations, including the need for detailed distinctions in lawsuit roles and exploration of heterogeneous TMT power dynamics. Further research is proposed for nuanced power dynamics and comprehensive TMT legal background data. The study advances upper echelons theory by introducing TMT legal expertise as a factor influencing strategic lawsuit behavior. It challenges institutional theory by showing the adaptable legal context, beyond fixed constraints. Moderating factors – group risk attitude and external knowledge – deepen understanding of upper echelons’ impact. Enhanced data collection is encouraged to address limitations and refine findings. Practical implications This study’s implications extend to managerial practices. Firms should acknowledge the dynamic legal system, using TMT legal expertise for strategic legal challenges. Executives should pragmatically approach regulations. While legal professionals enhance compliance, caution is needed in selecting TMT members with legal expertise due to the risk of misusing it for unnecessary litigation, potentially misaligned with financial performance goals. Originality/value This study combines institutional and upper echelons theories to explore TMT legal expertise’s impact on firms’ adaptive strategies in emerging economies. It challenges the idea of a universally constraining legal environment and highlights how TMT legal expertise enhances firms’ management of complex legal risks. The research introduces TMT legal expertise as an influencing factor in strategic lawsuits, revealing nuanced relationships between legal contexts and strategic decisions. The findings enrich upper echelons theory, challenge conventional institutional views and identify moderating factors that deepen the understanding of upper echelons’ influence in legal landscapes.
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专业人士真的重要吗?高层管理人员的法律专业知识与公司诉讼
本研究旨在运用制度理论和上层理论,全面研究TMT法律专业知识与企业在法律背景下的适应策略之间复杂的相互作用,特别是在新兴经济体中。它探讨了上层经验如何塑造机会主义合规策略,影响价值和风险观念。利用上层理论,本研究探讨了TMT法律专业知识如何塑造公司参与重大诉讼,并考虑其影响作用。它仔细研究了TMT对法律策略的影响,假设管理自由裁量权来自环境因素、组织属性和执行特征。该研究强调了TMT的内部激励和外部因素的相互作用,塑造了战略法律参与。设计/方法/方法为了验证这一框架,我们对2584家中国上市公司的数据进行了统计分析。该数据集涵盖2010年至2015年,涉及5,713起实质性诉讼。基于中国市场指数数据库中可靠的制度层面激励数据,2016-2019年因方法差异而被排除在外。此外,为了减轻潜在的金融危机影响,省略了2007-2009年。本研究的11,272项观察确保了强有力的实证探索,为TMT法律专业知识、制度因素和公司法律战略之间的相互作用提供了见解。研究结果显示,由具有法律专业知识的高管领导的公司更倾向于参与重大诉讼,这表明他们战略性地使用了法律技能。TMT的年龄缓和了这一点,年龄较大的团队不太可能参与其中。由于任期风险偏好的复杂性,TMT任期的影响尚不清楚。制度因素很重要;法律不成熟的地区降低了管理者的法律风险意愿。结果证实了假设,并突出了高管人力资本对公司法律战略的影响。研究局限/启示本研究承认贡献,同时强调局限性,包括需要详细区分诉讼角色和探索异质TMT权力动态。建议进一步研究微妙的权力动力学和全面的TMT法律背景数据。本研究通过引入TMT法律专业知识作为影响战略诉讼行为的因素来推进上层理论。它通过展示超越固定约束的适应性法律背景来挑战制度理论。调节因素——群体风险态度和外部知识——加深了对上层影响的理解。鼓励加强数据收集,以解决局限性和完善研究结果。实际意义本研究的意义延伸到管理实践。公司应该承认动态的法律体系,利用TMT的法律专业知识来应对战略性的法律挑战。高管们应该务实地对待监管。虽然法律专业人员加强了合规性,但在选择具有法律专业知识的TMT成员时需要谨慎,因为有可能将其滥用于不必要的诉讼,可能与财务绩效目标不一致。原创性/价值本研究结合制度理论和上层理论,探讨TMT法律专业知识对新兴经济体企业适应战略的影响。它挑战了普遍约束法律环境的想法,并强调了TMT法律专业知识如何增强公司对复杂法律风险的管理。该研究将TMT法律专业知识作为战略诉讼的影响因素,揭示了法律环境与战略决策之间的微妙关系。研究结果丰富了上层阶级理论,挑战了传统的制度观点,并确定了加深对上层阶级在法律景观中的影响的理解的调节因素。
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CiteScore
3.90
自引率
13.60%
发文量
63
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