Does national culture affect international corporate cash holdings?

Abstract

The current literature frequently examines the effects of shareholder rights protection on corporate cash holdings in the context of agency theory. In this study, we show that national culture influences corporate managers' cash holding behavior beyond the effects of corporate governance and financial market developments in each country through the perception of agency costs and value of financial flexibility. Using Hofstede's cultural dimension indices, we find that corporations hold larger cash and liquid balances in countries where the people tend to avoid uncertainty more, are culturally more masculine, and have longer term orientation.Cash holdings Culture Corporate governance

    Similar works

    Full text

    thumbnail-image

    Available Versions

    Last time updated on 06/07/2012