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Government intervention and investment efficiency: Evidence from China
Authors:Shimin Chen  Zheng SunSong Tang  Donghui Wu
Institution:
  • a Department of Finance and Accounting, China Europe International Business School, China
  • b Institute of Accounting and Finance, School of Accountancy, Shanghai University of Finance and Economics, China
  • c School of Accounting and Finance, The Hong Kong Polytechnic University, China
  • Abstract:The extant corporate investment literature has documented that information asymmetry and agency conflicts between managers and outside investors prevent firms from making optimal investment decisions. In this study, we investigate whether government intervention, as another form of friction, distorts firms' investment behavior and leads to investment inefficiency. Using Chinese data, we test this by measuring government intervention at two different levels. First, we compare investment efficiency between SOEs and non-SOEs. We find that the sensitivity of investment expenditure to investment opportunities is significantly weaker for SOEs. Second, we measure government intervention by whether a firm is politically connected through the employment of top executives with a government background. We find that political connections significantly reduce investment efficiency in SOEs. However, we do not find such evidence in non-SOEs. Taken together, our findings suggest that government intervention in SOEs through majority state ownership or the appointment of connected managers distorts investment behavior and harms investment efficiency.
    Keywords:G31  G34  L33  P31
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