Political Incentives to Suppress Negative Information: Evidence from Chinese Listed Firms
Stanford University · Chinese University of Hong Kong
Abstract
ABSTRACT This paper tests the proposition that politicians and their affiliated firms (i.e., firms operating in their province) temporarily suppress negative information in response to political incentives. We examine the stock price behavior of Chinese listed firms around two visible political events—meetings of the National Congress of the Chinese Communist Party and promotions of high‐level provincial politicians—that are expected to asymmetrically increase the costs of releasing bad news. The costs create an incentive for local politicians and their affiliated firms to temporarily restrict the flow of negative information about the companies. The result will be fewer stock price crashes for the affiliated…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 57.35
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 88
Authors
3Topics & keywords
- Incentive
- Negative information
- Politics
- Event study
- Business
- China
- Hoarding (animal behavior)
- Cronyism
- Peace, Justice and strong institutions