Effective tax rate, board diversity, and firm performance: Evidence from the electric and electronic industry

This study examines the effect of effective tax rate (ETR) and board diversity on the performance of Malaysian public-listed companies (PLCs) in the electric and electronic (E&E) industry. The sample of this study comprised 51 E&E public companies listed in the Main Market of Bursa Malaysia...

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Published in:Journal of Asian Scientific Research
Main Author: Razi Y.Md.; Kharuddin K.A.M.; Hamid N.A.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Asian Economic and Social Society 2024
Online Access:https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85188634138&doi=10.55493%2f5003.v14i1.4962&partnerID=40&md5=dcbf8edca357b0caf7e3cd48b96aa334
id 2-s2.0-85188634138
spelling 2-s2.0-85188634138
Razi Y.Md.; Kharuddin K.A.M.; Hamid N.A.
Effective tax rate, board diversity, and firm performance: Evidence from the electric and electronic industry
2024
Journal of Asian Scientific Research
14
1
10.55493/5003.v14i1.4962
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85188634138&doi=10.55493%2f5003.v14i1.4962&partnerID=40&md5=dcbf8edca357b0caf7e3cd48b96aa334
This study examines the effect of effective tax rate (ETR) and board diversity on the performance of Malaysian public-listed companies (PLCs) in the electric and electronic (E&E) industry. The sample of this study comprised 51 E&E public companies listed in the Main Market of Bursa Malaysia during the financial periods 2018 and 2022. This study documents a significant positive relationship between firm performance and ETR, consistent with the political cost theory, suggesting that high-performing industries such as E&E are more at risk of political scrutiny and, hence, tend to pay higher amounts of tax despite the tax incentives provided by the government. Interestingly, foreign directors are negatively related to a firm’s performance. The possible explanation for this is that the E&E industry is highly regulated by the Malaysian government; hence, foreign directors’ contribution and authority to make independent strategic changes to drive the firm’s performance are limited. Finally, the effect of female directors on firm performance is found to be insignificant, possibly because, on average, only 10% of women are represented on the board of the E&E PLCs. The study findings are of significant interest and beneficial to policymakers, the government, and tax authorities in trying to understand the implications, assess the effectiveness, and tightly monitor the tax incentives and board diversity policy of the E&E companies. © 2024 AESS Publications. All Rights Reserved.
Asian Economic and Social Society
22265724
English
Article
All Open Access; Gold Open Access
author Razi Y.Md.; Kharuddin K.A.M.; Hamid N.A.
spellingShingle Razi Y.Md.; Kharuddin K.A.M.; Hamid N.A.
Effective tax rate, board diversity, and firm performance: Evidence from the electric and electronic industry
author_facet Razi Y.Md.; Kharuddin K.A.M.; Hamid N.A.
author_sort Razi Y.Md.; Kharuddin K.A.M.; Hamid N.A.
title Effective tax rate, board diversity, and firm performance: Evidence from the electric and electronic industry
title_short Effective tax rate, board diversity, and firm performance: Evidence from the electric and electronic industry
title_full Effective tax rate, board diversity, and firm performance: Evidence from the electric and electronic industry
title_fullStr Effective tax rate, board diversity, and firm performance: Evidence from the electric and electronic industry
title_full_unstemmed Effective tax rate, board diversity, and firm performance: Evidence from the electric and electronic industry
title_sort Effective tax rate, board diversity, and firm performance: Evidence from the electric and electronic industry
publishDate 2024
container_title Journal of Asian Scientific Research
container_volume 14
container_issue 1
doi_str_mv 10.55493/5003.v14i1.4962
url https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85188634138&doi=10.55493%2f5003.v14i1.4962&partnerID=40&md5=dcbf8edca357b0caf7e3cd48b96aa334
description This study examines the effect of effective tax rate (ETR) and board diversity on the performance of Malaysian public-listed companies (PLCs) in the electric and electronic (E&E) industry. The sample of this study comprised 51 E&E public companies listed in the Main Market of Bursa Malaysia during the financial periods 2018 and 2022. This study documents a significant positive relationship between firm performance and ETR, consistent with the political cost theory, suggesting that high-performing industries such as E&E are more at risk of political scrutiny and, hence, tend to pay higher amounts of tax despite the tax incentives provided by the government. Interestingly, foreign directors are negatively related to a firm’s performance. The possible explanation for this is that the E&E industry is highly regulated by the Malaysian government; hence, foreign directors’ contribution and authority to make independent strategic changes to drive the firm’s performance are limited. Finally, the effect of female directors on firm performance is found to be insignificant, possibly because, on average, only 10% of women are represented on the board of the E&E PLCs. The study findings are of significant interest and beneficial to policymakers, the government, and tax authorities in trying to understand the implications, assess the effectiveness, and tightly monitor the tax incentives and board diversity policy of the E&E companies. © 2024 AESS Publications. All Rights Reserved.
publisher Asian Economic and Social Society
issn 22265724
language English
format Article
accesstype All Open Access; Gold Open Access
record_format scopus
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