Women on Management Board and Firm Performance: Evidence from The Visegrad Group Countries

Objective: The findings of previous research on women serving on company boards have been inconclusive, with some demonstrating a positive influence of women on company performance while others indicate a lack of impact. While certain theories advocate for the appointment of women to the bo...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Elżbieta Bukalska, Tomasz Sosnowski, Anna Wawryszuk-Misztal
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Cracow University of Economics 2024-06-01
Series:Entrepreneurial Business and Economics Review
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eber.uek.krakow.pl/eber/article/view/2067
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1850252251103232000
author Elżbieta Bukalska
Tomasz Sosnowski
Anna Wawryszuk-Misztal
author_facet Elżbieta Bukalska
Tomasz Sosnowski
Anna Wawryszuk-Misztal
author_sort Elżbieta Bukalska
collection DOAJ
description Objective: The findings of previous research on women serving on company boards have been inconclusive, with some demonstrating a positive influence of women on company performance while others indicate a lack of impact. While certain theories advocate for the appointment of women to the board, others offer counterarguments against gender diversity within boards. The connection between women on the board and company performance may be influenced by the institutional setting, specifically a culture of gender equality. Therefore, our objective is to explore how the presence of women on the board affects company performance within a comparable institutional environment.   Research Design & Methods: The study focuses on 451 publicly traded companies in the V4 countries (i.e. Poland, Hungary, the Czech Republic, and Slovakia) over 2019-2021 period, examining the composition of management boards in terms of gender diversity. The study used four types of characteristics to describe the management board's composition, including the presence of women on the board, the percentage of female directors, Blau's index of heterogeneity, and the gender of the CEO. The study used t-tests, Mann-Whitney U tests, and data regression to investigate the impact of female directors on company efficiency and market performance.   Findings: The data shows that only 32.8% of companies have at least one woman on their management board and the average share of women on these boards is low at 12%. The study finds that companies with at least one woman on the board have higher capitalization, revenues, profit, total assets, and debt, with statistical significance. In terms of firm performance, companies with women on their board have slightly higher operating and market ratios. We find a positive relationship between operating efficiency and the percentage of women on the management board and board gender diversity, but no statistically significant association between women’s presence on the management board and market performance. Our study supports the hypothesis that a woman's presence on the management board affects firm performance.   Implications & Recommendations: The findings can be valuable and may have practical implications for policymakers and company executives who seek to improve firm performance and promote gender diversity because they provide empirical evidence that gender diversity in corporate leadership can have a positive impact on a company's performance. Policymakers can use this information to support and promote policies that encourage gender diversity in corporate leadership. Companies interested in promoting diversity can use this information to support their efforts to increase gender diversity on their management boards and potentially improve their performance.   Contribution & Value Added: This study contributes to the ongoing discussion on gender diversity in corporate leadership and its potential impact on firm performance. By analyzing a sample of companies from CEE countries with the two-tier system of corporate governance, the study provides empirical evidence that the appointment of women to manage-ment boards is associated with higher firm performance in terms of operating efficiency. The study's findings also shed light on the differences in the representation of women on management boards between coun-tries, with Poland having the lowest representation of women. This suggests that there may be cultural or institutional factors that influence gender diversity in corporate leadership.  
format Article
id doaj-art-e0f134f73f5848c0ab22db31c22c25c5
institution OA Journals
issn 2353-8821
language English
publishDate 2024-06-01
publisher Cracow University of Economics
record_format Article
series Entrepreneurial Business and Economics Review
spelling doaj-art-e0f134f73f5848c0ab22db31c22c25c52025-08-20T01:57:43ZengCracow University of EconomicsEntrepreneurial Business and Economics Review2353-88212024-06-0112210.15678/EBER.2024.120203Women on Management Board and Firm Performance: Evidence from The Visegrad Group CountriesElżbieta Bukalska0https://orcid.org/0000-0001-8097-5964Tomasz Sosnowskihttps://orcid.org/0000-0001-5610-0404Anna Wawryszuk-Misztalhttps://orcid.org/0000-0002-5016-9117UMCS Objective: The findings of previous research on women serving on company boards have been inconclusive, with some demonstrating a positive influence of women on company performance while others indicate a lack of impact. While certain theories advocate for the appointment of women to the board, others offer counterarguments against gender diversity within boards. The connection between women on the board and company performance may be influenced by the institutional setting, specifically a culture of gender equality. Therefore, our objective is to explore how the presence of women on the board affects company performance within a comparable institutional environment.   Research Design & Methods: The study focuses on 451 publicly traded companies in the V4 countries (i.e. Poland, Hungary, the Czech Republic, and Slovakia) over 2019-2021 period, examining the composition of management boards in terms of gender diversity. The study used four types of characteristics to describe the management board's composition, including the presence of women on the board, the percentage of female directors, Blau's index of heterogeneity, and the gender of the CEO. The study used t-tests, Mann-Whitney U tests, and data regression to investigate the impact of female directors on company efficiency and market performance.   Findings: The data shows that only 32.8% of companies have at least one woman on their management board and the average share of women on these boards is low at 12%. The study finds that companies with at least one woman on the board have higher capitalization, revenues, profit, total assets, and debt, with statistical significance. In terms of firm performance, companies with women on their board have slightly higher operating and market ratios. We find a positive relationship between operating efficiency and the percentage of women on the management board and board gender diversity, but no statistically significant association between women’s presence on the management board and market performance. Our study supports the hypothesis that a woman's presence on the management board affects firm performance.   Implications & Recommendations: The findings can be valuable and may have practical implications for policymakers and company executives who seek to improve firm performance and promote gender diversity because they provide empirical evidence that gender diversity in corporate leadership can have a positive impact on a company's performance. Policymakers can use this information to support and promote policies that encourage gender diversity in corporate leadership. Companies interested in promoting diversity can use this information to support their efforts to increase gender diversity on their management boards and potentially improve their performance.   Contribution & Value Added: This study contributes to the ongoing discussion on gender diversity in corporate leadership and its potential impact on firm performance. By analyzing a sample of companies from CEE countries with the two-tier system of corporate governance, the study provides empirical evidence that the appointment of women to manage-ment boards is associated with higher firm performance in terms of operating efficiency. The study's findings also shed light on the differences in the representation of women on management boards between coun-tries, with Poland having the lowest representation of women. This suggests that there may be cultural or institutional factors that influence gender diversity in corporate leadership.   https://eber.uek.krakow.pl/eber/article/view/2067board gender diversityoperating performancemarket performancethe Visegrad Grouptwo-tier corporate governance system
spellingShingle Elżbieta Bukalska
Tomasz Sosnowski
Anna Wawryszuk-Misztal
Women on Management Board and Firm Performance: Evidence from The Visegrad Group Countries
Entrepreneurial Business and Economics Review
board gender diversity
operating performance
market performance
the Visegrad Group
two-tier corporate governance system
title Women on Management Board and Firm Performance: Evidence from The Visegrad Group Countries
title_full Women on Management Board and Firm Performance: Evidence from The Visegrad Group Countries
title_fullStr Women on Management Board and Firm Performance: Evidence from The Visegrad Group Countries
title_full_unstemmed Women on Management Board and Firm Performance: Evidence from The Visegrad Group Countries
title_short Women on Management Board and Firm Performance: Evidence from The Visegrad Group Countries
title_sort women on management board and firm performance evidence from the visegrad group countries
topic board gender diversity
operating performance
market performance
the Visegrad Group
two-tier corporate governance system
url https://eber.uek.krakow.pl/eber/article/view/2067
work_keys_str_mv AT elzbietabukalska womenonmanagementboardandfirmperformanceevidencefromthevisegradgroupcountries
AT tomaszsosnowski womenonmanagementboardandfirmperformanceevidencefromthevisegradgroupcountries
AT annawawryszukmisztal womenonmanagementboardandfirmperformanceevidencefromthevisegradgroupcountries