Governance or reputation? Flexible tax enforcement and excess goodwill: Evidence from the taxpaying credit rating system in China

被引:2
|
作者
Luo, Jingbo [1 ]
Guo, Chun [1 ]
机构
[1] Lanzhou Univ, Sch Management, Lanzhou, Peoples R China
关键词
Flexible tax enforcement; Taxpaying credit rating; Excess goodwill; M&A; Reputation-based effect; CEO REPUTATION; CORPORATE; FIRMS; PHILANTHROPY; AVOIDANCE; MATTER; COSTS; MEDIA; THEFT;
D O I
10.1016/j.cjar.2023.100316
中图分类号
F8 [财政、金融];
学科分类号
0202 ;
摘要
This study investigates the effect of flexible tax enforcement on firms' excess goodwill using unique manually collected data on taxpaying credit rating in China from 2014 to 2021. We document that A-rated taxpayer firms have less excess goodwill; A-rated firms reduce excess goodwill by 0.005 vis-a-vis non-A-rated firms, which accounts for 100% of the mean value of excess goodwill. This finding holds after multiple robustness tests and an endogeneity analysis. Moreover, this negative effect is more pronounced in firms with low information transparency, that are non-state-owned and that are located in regions with low tax enforcement intensity. The channel test results suggest that taxpaying credit rating system as flexible tax enforcement reduces firms' excess goodwill through a reputation-based effect and not a governance-based effect. This study reveals that the taxpaying credit rating system in China as flexible tax enforcement can bring halo effect to A rating firms, thereby limiting irrational M&As and breaking goodwill bubble. (C) 2023 Sun Yat-sen University. Production and hosting by Elsevier B.V. This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).
引用
收藏
页数:26
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Tax enforcement and corporate employment: Evidence from a quasi-natural experiment in China
    Liu, Guanchun
    Liu, Yuanyuan
    Zhang, Chengsi
    CHINA ECONOMIC REVIEW, 2022, 73
  • [32] Unintended consequences of tax enforcement on corporate innovation: Evidence from a natural experiment in China
    Liu, Lihua
    Weng, Danyan
    Zhang, Qin
    ECONOMIC ANALYSIS AND POLICY, 2023, 80 : 1292 - 1309
  • [33] Vulnerability to tax enforcement and spillovers of corruption: cross-industry evidence from China
    Chen, Shawn Xiaoguang
    JOURNAL OF LAW ECONOMICS & ORGANIZATION, 2022, 40 (02): : 289 - 337
  • [34] Tax incentives and environmental, social, and governance performance: empirical evidence from China
    Naiping Zhu
    Yueyong Zhou
    Siyi Zhang
    Jin Yan
    Environmental Science and Pollution Research, 2023, 30 : 54899 - 54913
  • [35] Tax incentives and environmental, social, and governance performance: empirical evidence from China
    Zhu, Naiping
    Zhou, Yueyong
    Zhang, Siyi
    Yan, Jin
    ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE AND POLLUTION RESEARCH, 2023, 30 (19) : 54899 - 54913
  • [36] Discussion of 'Government ownership, corporate governance and tax aggressiveness: evidence from China'
    Chen, Chen
    ACCOUNTING AND FINANCE, 2013, 53 (04): : 1053 - 1059
  • [37] Corporate Social Responsibility Rating, Corporate Governance, and Financial Distress: Evidence from China
    Guotai, Chi
    Khalil, Hassan
    Erraja, Chayma
    ASIA-PACIFIC JOURNAL OF FINANCIAL STUDIES, 2023, 52 (01) : 6 - 34
  • [38] The effect of corporate governance on credit ratings: Evidence from China's bond market
    Bradford, William
    Chen, Chao
    Zhao, Yang
    JOURNAL OF INTERNATIONAL FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT & ACCOUNTING, 2019, 30 (02) : 113 - 144
  • [39] Corporate governance, CSR and corporate reputation: evidence from China's real estate industry
    Sun Wen
    Yang Changzhi
    PROCEEDINGS OF THE 2ND EURO-ASIA CONFERENCE ON ENVIRONMENT AND CORPORATE SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY: SOCIETY AND MANAGEMENT SECTION, 2007, 2008, : 65 - 71
  • [40] Do credit rating agencies listen to investors' voices on social media? Evidence from China
    Liu, Yu
    Yang, Lingxuan
    Zhou, Jing
    INTERNATIONAL REVIEW OF ECONOMICS & FINANCE, 2023, 88 : 1475 - 1499