Speakers of strong future time reference (FTR) languages (e.g., English) are required to grammatically distinguish between future and present events, while speakers of weak-FTR languages (e.g., Chinese) are not. We hypothesize that speaking about the future in the present tense may result in the belief that adverse credit events are more imminent. Consistent with such a linguistic hypothesis, weak-FTR language firms are found to have higher precautionary cash holdings. We report additional supportive results from changes in the relative importance of different languages in a country's business domain, evidence from within one country with several distinct languages, and results related to changes following a severe financial crisis. Our evi...
Using a sample of 205,792 individuals in 70 countries with 39 languages, this paper presents novel e...
Synopsis: The research problem In this study, we investigate the relationship between the future-t...
AbstractThis paper investigates the empirical relationship between language structures and prevalent...
Speakers of strong future time reference (FTR) languages (e.g., English) are required to grammatical...
Speakers of weak future-time reference (FTR) languages perceive the future as closer and more immine...
We argue that the language spoken by corporate decision makers influences their firms’ social respon...
According to Chen's (2013) Linguistic Savings Hypothesis (LSH), our native language affects our econ...
We examine how international variation in corporate future-oriented behavior, such as corporate soci...
The research problem This paper assesses whether and how people’s perceptions of time — strong futur...
We predict that managers of firms in countries where languages do not require speakers to grammatica...
Since Chen (2013), a fast-growing body of literature has documented abundant supporting evidence for...
Futureless languages, or those described in the field of linguistics as having a weak Future Time Re...
This study draws on the linguistics literature, which recognizes the role of language attributes in ...
Languages differ widely in the ways they encode time. I test the hypothesis that languages that gramm...
The famous linguistic-savings hypothesis states that languages that grammatically separate the futur...
Using a sample of 205,792 individuals in 70 countries with 39 languages, this paper presents novel e...
Synopsis: The research problem In this study, we investigate the relationship between the future-t...
AbstractThis paper investigates the empirical relationship between language structures and prevalent...
Speakers of strong future time reference (FTR) languages (e.g., English) are required to grammatical...
Speakers of weak future-time reference (FTR) languages perceive the future as closer and more immine...
We argue that the language spoken by corporate decision makers influences their firms’ social respon...
According to Chen's (2013) Linguistic Savings Hypothesis (LSH), our native language affects our econ...
We examine how international variation in corporate future-oriented behavior, such as corporate soci...
The research problem This paper assesses whether and how people’s perceptions of time — strong futur...
We predict that managers of firms in countries where languages do not require speakers to grammatica...
Since Chen (2013), a fast-growing body of literature has documented abundant supporting evidence for...
Futureless languages, or those described in the field of linguistics as having a weak Future Time Re...
This study draws on the linguistics literature, which recognizes the role of language attributes in ...
Languages differ widely in the ways they encode time. I test the hypothesis that languages that gramm...
The famous linguistic-savings hypothesis states that languages that grammatically separate the futur...
Using a sample of 205,792 individuals in 70 countries with 39 languages, this paper presents novel e...
Synopsis: The research problem In this study, we investigate the relationship between the future-t...
AbstractThis paper investigates the empirical relationship between language structures and prevalent...