While various theoretical arguments have been constructed that imply that a firm would see improved financial performance by increasing the proportion of women managers, previous studies on the issue, in Japan and elsewhere, have shown mixed results. Using data from Toyo Keizai and Nikkei NEEDS on 745 Japanese-listed companies, the authors investigate the impact of womens managerial participation and, more generally, overall workplace and managerial gender diversity on corporate performance. They find a robust significant positive relationship between firm performance and both female manager ratio and gender diversity, after controlling for industry, firm size, capital structure, corporate governance, and compensation policy. This relations...
Working paper on INCAS blog : https://incas.hypotheses.org/Enhancing gender diversity on boards of d...
This paper adopts quantitative research to analyze the relationship between gender diversity and cor...
This paper examines the relationship between female participation in top management and on corporate...
This research is unique because it presents empirical evidence testing whether increasing gender div...
We address a gap in prior literature on female managerial representation and corporate performance. ...
This paper investigates the relationship between gender diversity on management boards and financial...
This research examines the relationship between gender diversity in top management teams on the prof...
This study analyzes the effects of gender diversity and corporate governance on firm’s performance...
Drawing on arguments from the management and human resource economics literatures, we hypothesise th...
This study examines the relationship between managerial gender diversity and firm performance. It ou...
How to increase the number of female manager is still one of the contemporary issues in Japan. In co...
We argue that female representation in top management brings informational and social diversity bene...
The social construction of gender has led to differences in beliefs, knowledge, experiences, or netw...
This study is based on a survey of male and female workers in organizations in and around Nagoya, Ja...
Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to examine the relationship between gender diversity on the ma...
Working paper on INCAS blog : https://incas.hypotheses.org/Enhancing gender diversity on boards of d...
This paper adopts quantitative research to analyze the relationship between gender diversity and cor...
This paper examines the relationship between female participation in top management and on corporate...
This research is unique because it presents empirical evidence testing whether increasing gender div...
We address a gap in prior literature on female managerial representation and corporate performance. ...
This paper investigates the relationship between gender diversity on management boards and financial...
This research examines the relationship between gender diversity in top management teams on the prof...
This study analyzes the effects of gender diversity and corporate governance on firm’s performance...
Drawing on arguments from the management and human resource economics literatures, we hypothesise th...
This study examines the relationship between managerial gender diversity and firm performance. It ou...
How to increase the number of female manager is still one of the contemporary issues in Japan. In co...
We argue that female representation in top management brings informational and social diversity bene...
The social construction of gender has led to differences in beliefs, knowledge, experiences, or netw...
This study is based on a survey of male and female workers in organizations in and around Nagoya, Ja...
Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to examine the relationship between gender diversity on the ma...
Working paper on INCAS blog : https://incas.hypotheses.org/Enhancing gender diversity on boards of d...
This paper adopts quantitative research to analyze the relationship between gender diversity and cor...
This paper examines the relationship between female participation in top management and on corporate...