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Work-from-home and the risk of securities misconduct
Authors:Douglas Cumming  Chris Firth  John Gathergood  Neil Stewart
Institution:1. College of Business, Florida Atlantic University, Boca Raton, Florida, USA;2. School of Economics, University of Nottingham, University Park, Nottingham, UK;3. Warwick Business School, University of Warwick, Coventry, UK
Abstract:In the wake of the global pandemic, a challenge for CEOs and boards is to set a stakeholder-acceptable organizational balance between remote and traditional office working. However, the risks of work-from-home are not yet fully understood. We describe competing theories that predict the effect on misconduct of a corporate shift to work-from-home. Using internal bank data on securities traders we exploit lockdown variation induced by emergency regulation of the Covid-19 pandemic. Our difference-in-differences analysis reveals that working from home lowers the likelihood of securities misconduct; ultimately those working from home exhibit fewer misconduct alerts. The economic significance of these changes is large. Our study makes an important step toward understanding the link between the balance of work locations and the risk that comes with this tradeoff.
Keywords:fraud  risk management  securities misconduct  surveillance  work-from-home
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