Trade Secrets Law and Corporate Disclosure: Causal Evidence on the Proprietary Cost Hypothesis |
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Authors: | YINGHUA LI YUPENG LIN LIANDONG ZHANG |
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Affiliation: | 1. School of AccountancyArizona State University;2. NUS Business SchoolNational University of Singapore;3. School of AccountancySingapore Management University |
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Abstract: | This study exploits the staggered adoption of the inevitable disclosure doctrine (IDD) by U.S. state courts as an exogenous shock that generates variations in the proprietary costs of disclosure. We find that firms respond to IDD adoption by reducing the level of disclosure regarding their customers’ identities, supporting the proprietary cost hypothesis. Our results are stronger for firms in industries with a higher degree of entry threats, for firms in more volatile industries, and for firms with a lower degree of external financing dependence. Overall, this study represents one of the first efforts in identifying the causal effect of proprietary costs of disclosure on the supply of disclosure. |
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Keywords: | D82 D83 K11 L1 M41 proprietary costs corporate disclosure customer identity inevitable disclosure doctrine trade secrets law |
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