2013
DOI: 10.1111/acfi.12043
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Government ownership, corporate governance and tax aggressiveness: evidence from China

Abstract: This study investigates how government ownership and corporate governance influence a firm's tax aggressiveness. Using Chinese listed companies during 2003-2009, we find that compared with government-controlled firms, nongovernment-controlled firms pursue a more aggressive tax strategy. In particular, non-government-controlled firms with a higher percentage of the board shareholdings and with a CEO who also serves as the board chairman are more aggressive. For government-controlled firms, we find that board sh… Show more

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Cited by 113 publications
(106 citation statements)
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References 56 publications
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“…For example, Zeng (2011) finds that the effective tax rates of government-controlled firms are larger than those of non-government-controlled firms. Chan et al (2013) show that non-government-controlled firms pursue a more aggressive tax strategy compared to government-controlled firms.…”
Section: Ownership Structure and Tax Avoidancementioning
confidence: 95%
See 3 more Smart Citations
“…For example, Zeng (2011) finds that the effective tax rates of government-controlled firms are larger than those of non-government-controlled firms. Chan et al (2013) show that non-government-controlled firms pursue a more aggressive tax strategy compared to government-controlled firms.…”
Section: Ownership Structure and Tax Avoidancementioning
confidence: 95%
“…Based on this special principal-agent relationship, the officials or managers of state-owned firms do not have incentives to care seriously about increasing the firm value because they do no hold the absolute ownership of these assets. These managers of government-controlled firms are governmental bureaucrats, their promotions and career prospects are evaluated by various political and social objectives, not just maximization of firm value (Chan et al, 2013). According to La Porta et al (1999), we argue that government-controlled firms are run not by professional managers who are unaccountable to other shareholders but by controlling shareholders (i.e., governmental officials).…”
Section: Ownership Structure and Tax Avoidancementioning
confidence: 96%
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“…Board independence, board financial expertise and audit committee independence have also been shown to be associated with reduced earnings management behaviour in Australia (Hutchinson et al, 2008;Clout et al, 2013). On the other hand, Gray et al (2016) show that in developed markets, such as Australia, there is no evidence that political and government connections are particularly valuable for shareholders, in contrast to studies examining the effect in developing economies (Chan et al, 2013).…”
Section: Corporate Governance Regulationmentioning
confidence: 97%