CEO Power, Bank Risk Taking and National Culture: International Evidence

Eilnaz Kashefi Pour, Moshfique Uddin*, Victor Murinde, Shima Amini

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Using unique hand-collected data for 336 large banks across 48 countries, together with values of national culture, our empirical analysis uncovers three new robust findings. First, variations of bank risk-taking across national culture and CEO power are more pronounced when cultural values and CEO power indicators are high. Second, while the individualism dimension of national culture has a moderating influence, the uncertainty avoidance dimension has a reinforcing effect, on the relationship between CEO power and bank risk-taking. In more detail, the results for the average marginal effect of CEO power on risk for different cultural values show that CEO power has a negative (positive) or insignificant impact on bank risk-taking when the value of individualism (uncertainty avoidance) is low; however, the impact becomes positive (negative) and statistically significant as the value of individualism (uncertainty avoidance) increases. Third, intra-cultural diversity matters: ‘tight’ cultures (e.g. strong social norms) are more pronounced than ‘loose’ cultures (e.g. heterogeneous values) in influencing bank risk.
Original languageEnglish
Article number101133
JournalJournal of Financial Stability
Early online date3 Jun 2023
DOIs
Publication statusE-pub ahead of print - 3 Jun 2023

Keywords

  • National culture
  • individualism
  • uncertainty avoidance
  • bank risk-taking
  • CEO power
  • hierarchical linear modeling

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