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Top Management Turnover, Firm Performance and Government Control: Evidence from China’s Listed State-Owned Enterprises * Fang Hu Department of Accountancy, College of Business, City University of Hong Kong Email: [email protected] Sidney C. M. Leung Department of Accountancy, College of Business, City University of Hong Kong Email: [email protected] May 2010 * We appreciate comments from Kelvin Lam, Grant Richardson, Bikki Jaggi, Tianyu Zhang, participants of the 2009 American Accounting Association annual meeting and seminar participants at the Seoul National University. Abstract Using a sample of 916 Chinese listed state-owned enterprises (SOEs) from 2001 to 2005, we find that the likelihood of top management turnover is negatively associated with firm performance, suggesting the existence of an effective corporate governance mechanism in an emerging economy that is highly controlled by government. We also find that the negative turnover-performance relationship is stronger when the SOE is held by the Central Government, is directly held by a local government, or holds a monopolistic position in a local economy or in a strategic/regulated industry. The results indicate that the market-based corporate governance mechanism that punishes top executives as a result of poor performance is not only used in Chinese SOEs, but is used more frequently when the governance control of SOEs is more intensive. Our findings support the notion that government control strengthens rather than weakens the turnover-performance governance mechanism. Our additional analysis shows that this complementary effect persists in regions that lack pro-market institutions such as investor protections and a functioning capital market. 1 1. Introduction A large body of evidence from developed markets confirms the effectiveness of corporate governance in spurring CEO turnover (Banker and Datar, 1989; Holmstrom and Milgrom, 1991; Engel et al., 2003; Bushman et al., 2004; Weisbach, 1988; Murphy and Zimmerman, 1993). However, the literature generally shows that there are doubts over whether the corporate governance mechanisms that have been shown to be effective in developed economies (market-based governance mechanisms) are equally effective in emerging economy SOEs because the significant political influence that government has over such firms could lead to the emergence of a ‘stakeholder’ governance model, which is characterized by a relation-based contract rather than a market-based contract (Ball et al. 2000, 2003). It has been argued that SOEs have multiple objectives including political objectives because they have to maintain close relationships with their major stakeholders, such as governments, banks and financial institutions, and labor unions, thus reducing the effectiveness of market-based corporate governance mechanisms aligned with firm performance. However, some researchers argue that effective market and governance mechanisms are an important ingredient in the success of some emerging economies such as China (Chow, 2010). This study examines the corporate governance of listed state-owned enterprises in China, the world’s largest emerging economy, which is characterized by intensive state and government control. We address two research questions. First, is the market-based governance mechanism whereby top executives are punished for poor performance effectively used in corporate businesses with intensive government control or influence? Second, and more importantly, is the association between top management turnover and poor performance stronger or weaker when governance control of SOEs is more intensive? These two research questions are important given the opposite views on the effects of government control of SOEs. On the one hand, doubts have been raised about the effectiveness of market-based corporate governance in an emerging economy like China that is highly controlled by government (e.g., Ball et al., 2000, 2003; Bushman and Piotroski, 2006; Chan et al., 2001; Jaggi et al., 2000; Opper, 2007). Tam (1999, 2002) and Tenev and Zhang (2002) argue that top managers are unlikely to be fired and replaced due to poor performance because of the involvement of state and party bureaucrats in the appraisal process. On the other hand, government control may serve as a remedy for a lack of pro-market institutions (Frye et al., 1997; Qian, 1996; Xu et al., 2002). Some prior studies suggest that government control/ownership is not necessarily less efficient than private ownership (Caves et al., 1980; Wortzel et al., 1989; Martin et al., 1995; Kole et al., 1997). Indeed, government involvement or regulation may offer a helping hand to ensure corporate business activity is efficiently governed (Shleifer et al. 1997; La Porta et al., 2000; Qian, 1996; Chang et al, 2004). Therefore, government control could either complement or substitute the market-based top management turnover governance mechanism. Our findings should enrich the understanding of whether government control and corporate governance mechanisms are complementary or substitutive in Chinese SOEs and are likely to provide insights into the role of government control in corporate governance in emerging economies. China’s economy, the biggest among emerging markets, is one throughout which the government has traditionally played an important role. State-owned enterprises (SOEs) account for the majority of the economy. The majority of China’s listed firms are controlled by state shareholders who retain their dominant control in the form of nontradable state-owned share (Sun et al., 2003). Among the top 500 firms in China in 2007, 349 (about 70%) were SOEs. While China has embarked on a series of reforms 3 since the 1980s that have included privatization, corporatization, and the implementation of an incentive contract system for SOEs managers, the government retains dominant control through its ownership of non-tradable state-owned shares or through its administrative authority over important SOE decisions. 1 Decisions to appoint or remove key SOE personnel such as the chairman of the board or the CEO are still in the hands of state controlling shareholders (Wong et al., 2004). China’s SOEs provide a setting that is particularly conducive to testing the role of government control on corporate governance because the SOEs are mainly controlled at the jurisdictional levels and there is considerable variation in the degree of political control and the extent of regulation across the jurisdictional regions. The large number of SOEs and the variety in market institutions across regions allow us to perform a meaningful analysis in a single country. Moreover, focusing on a single country under the control of a unitary party enables us to capture the direct effects of government control on corporate governance. Using a sample of 4,906 firm-year observations from 916 Chinese SOEs listed on the Shanghai and Shenzhen securities markets from 2001 to 2005, we find that CEOs or chairmen are more likely to be fired in firms with poor accounting performance, a result which suggests that the market-based corporate governance mechanism is employed in SOEs that are typically subject to government control. To test the intertwining effect of government control on the turnover-performance relationship, we use several proxies to measure various aspects of government control: (i) the concentration of government ownership, in which government control is measured 1 The Party and the government maintain ultimate and effective control over some aspects of decision making among firms through a variety of authorization processes: the appointment and dismissal of top managers, the approval of large investment projects, and vetoes of large asset disposals. One of the fundamental principles of Chinese government control is known as “the Party controlling personnel”. The Party or government exercises ultimate control over the selection and dismissal of personnel including the heads of most SOEs. Under the system of political authorization, an appointment does not carry an explicit compensation package as it typically would in a private firm financed through a capital market. 4 through property rights; (ii) the jurisdictional level of government ownership, in which government control is measured by administrative hierarchy; (iii) the monopolistic position of an SOE, in which government control interests are measured because of their importance to fiscal revenue and the political status of the local government; and (iv) the strategic industry of an SOE, in which the importance of the industry to the national economy and the extent to which it is subject to government control through regulations are measured. We find that the negative relationship between top management turnover and firm performance is significantly stronger among SOEs subject to central or direct local government control, SOEs in a monopolistic position, and SOEs in a strategic industry. However, we do not find that the relationship is affected by concentrated government ownership. The overall results support the view that the tighter the government control, the greater the degree of corporate control exercised through the turnover-performance mechanism in China’s SOEs, suggesting that these control mechanisms are complementary. Our additional analysis shows that the complementary effect of government control on the turnover-performance relationship strongly persists in firms from regions with poor investor protections and less market liberalization. The results are consistent with the view that government control can serve as a remedy for a lack of pro-market institutions as suggested by Xu et al. (2002) and Frye et al. (1997). This paper contributes to the existing literature in three ways. First, while most prior research suggests that the corporate governance system in developed economies is driven by the pressure of the external capital market, we show that the effectiveness of one corporate control mechanism – management turnover decisions – could also be driven by government control and government interests in enterprises in China, a country which is similar to other emerging economies in its lack of full market 5 competition and democratization. Some economists criticize government control over corporations and argue that government control is detrimental to corporate operations because the government is obsessed with multiple objectives that are muddied by political views and government control precludes the existence of an individual owner with strong incentives to monitor managers. As a result, government control will drive the company away from value maximization (Alchian, 1965; Bai et al., 2005; Kornai, 1980; Shleifer et al., 1994, 1997). The alternative view is that government control or regulation could act as a check-and-balance mechanism that ensures more efficient corporate governance, particularly in a less-developed environment lacking pro-market institutions (Shleifer et al. 1997; La Porta et al., 2000). Our results lend support to the latter view that government control is beneficial rather than detrimental. Second, despite criticism that the Chinese economy lacks a functioning capital market and significant investor protection and is subject to extensive government influence and control, China had been experiencing remarkably rapid economic growth in the last two decades and is expected to continue on its high growth trajectory in the next decade. Our findings provide a partial explanation for this intriguing phenomenon. Although China’s economy lacks full market competition and pro-market institutions, our results suggest that government control could serve both as a good check-andbalance mechanism that ensures more effective corporate decisions are made and as a remedy for incomplete pro-market institutions. Third, the findings provide a better understanding of the managerial labor market in a transitional economy which is still subject to significant government control. It is argued that the Chinese government selects officers and managers based on political connections or other political considerations (the non-performance hypothesis of Opper (2007)). Although political connections remain a focus of attention in China, evidence 6 shows that observable performance measures are demanded as a control mechanism in a transitional economy if the government aims to establish a rule-based governance system (Chen et al., 2007; Li et al., 2004). We provide additional evidence on the “performance hypothesis” of managerial labor in an emerging economy. The remainder of the paper is organized as follows. Section 2 reviews the literature and sets out the background to the study. Section 3 develops hypotheses and section 4 presents the research design. Section 5 describes the sample and data. Section 6 reports the results. Section 7 performs robustness checks and section 8 concludes the paper. 2. Literature Review and Background 2.1 Management Turnover and Firm Performance in Prior Studies Management turnover is an important aspect of a firm’s governance system. When ownership and control are separated, one of the methods stakeholders use to monitor and control management is to align the manager’s incentives with firm performance. Thus, the relationship between management turnover and firm performance is a good way of assessing the effectiveness of a firm’s governance system and has been widely discussed in the literature (Banker and Datar, 1989; Holmstrom and Milgrom, 1991; Engel et al., 2003; Bushman et al., 2004; Weisbach, 1988; Murphy and Zimmerman, 1993). Existing studies, which focus on privately held firms in developed market economies, have reached two general conclusions. First, forced management turnover is significantly negatively associated with firm accounting performance (Brickley, 2003; Coughlan and Schmidt, 1985; EHW, 2003; Kaplan, 1994; Morck, Shleifer and Vishny, 1989; Weisbach, 1988). The inverse turnover-performance relationship represents an efficient incentive mechanism in which managers are removed because of poor performance. Second, the inverse relation between management turnover and 7 accounting information on firm performance is induced by the pressure of the external capital market. Because the external capital market demands a public, precise, and observable measure of firm efficacy, accounting information is a useful measure in turnover or compensation decision making (Banker and Datar, 1989; DeFond and Park, 1999; Holmstrom and Milgrom, 1991; EHW, 2003). Nevertheless, there is no clear evidence on the effectiveness of firm governance systems in a developing market. 2.2 Government control and corporate governance in China’s SOEs Two different roles of government control should be considered in analyzing the objective functions of government owners in China’s SOEs. The first role of government control is to act as the largest shareholder in the SOE. The incentive problems that arise between shareholders and managers and are most commonly discussed in the context of private firms also arise in the governance of SOEs. In spite of their social and political goals, state shareholders have ownership interests in the profitability of their companies (Frydman et al., 1996; Blanchard et al., 1996; Earle et al., 1996; Hellman and Schankerman, 2000). The second role government control plays is to allow the government to exert political or regulatory influence over the SOE. Government officers or bureaucrats are appointed to supervise SOEs with objectives to serve social and political interests such as correcting market failures and providing additional employment opportunities and social security to the public (Shleifer et al. 1994, 1997). In addition, state ownership implies that bureaucrats exercise control on behalf of the government. They are motivated by self-interest and will thus use stateowned company resources to promote their own personal interests (Shleifer et al. 1994, 1998; Jones, 1985; Krueger, 1990). As a result, the objective function of state owners is at best a weighted average of company performance and the attainment of political 8 goals that often detract from company performance. Due to the complex incentives of government and individual bureaucrats, the corporate governance structure of SOEs reflects a mixture of various controlling methods and incentive issues in which government control through state shareholdings may be employed as an explicit control device alongside other modern corporate governance mechanisms. Most existing studies focus on the objectives of individual politicians and neglect the incentive issues of controlling shareholders (Frydman et al., 1996; Blanchard et al., 1996; Earle et al., 1996; Hellman et al., 2000; Kato et al., 2006). Most theoretical arguments rely on the assumption that the government functions purely as a political body or a regulator which has objectives other than profitability and that these objectives encourage the government to intervene in business activities. It is also important to take into account of state shareholders’ incentives in setting control mechanisms in SOEs. Since the 1990s, the Chinese government has adopted a modern corporate governance structure in an effort to transform Chinese SOEs into modern corporations while preserving state ownership of these enterprises. One of the modern corporate systems introduced to Chinese SOEs is a system of incentive contracts designed to monitor SOE managers. Performance contracts have been executed between managers and state owners (Shirley et al., 2001). Such performance contracts include an undertaking from the top SOE manager to achieve a specified earnings target within a given time period and specify government rewards for achieving such goals and penalties for misconduct (Chang et al., 2009; Shirley et al., 2001). In addition, the corporate governance structure of listed SOEs includes some major sources of political control for the benefit of state shareholders (Chang et al., 2004). One of these is the decision-making rights held by the government through shareholdings and control rights. A second source of political control is the authority or 9 regulatory scrutiny exerted by government administrators and line ministries to ensure that their shareholding benefits are maximized by political checks and balances (Chang et al., 2004; Qian, 1996). 3 Hypothesis Development 3.1 Top Management Turnover and Firm Performance in China’s SOEs As discussed in the last section, Chinese SOEs are ultimately controlled by government entities. Management turnover decisions and the criteria used for such decisions are made by the state owner, which has objective functions as both a shareholder and a political body. The role of government control in the governance of SOEs is controversial. On the one hand, economists generally argue that government control is detrimental to corporate operations because the government is obsessed with multiple objectives (the political agenda) or because there is no individual owner with strong incentives to monitor SOE managers. Thus, government control will drive the company away from value maximization and the government is unlikely to use market-based governance mechanisms (Bai et al., 2005; Kornai, 1980; Shleifer et al., 1994, 1997). Consistent with this view, Kato and Long (2006) find that relative to the listed private Chinese firms, the negative relation between CEO turnover and firm performance is weaker state-controlled firms. On the other hand, the government has strong incentives as the owner of an SOE to adopt effective corporate control methods that allow it to monitor managers on the basis of economic performance. The Chinese Central Government has emphasized the economic performance of Chinese SOEs since embarking on its economic reforms in the 1980s by promoting fiscal decentralization and yardstick competition policies. 10 The fiscal decentralization policy involves the decentralization of the revenue and expense responsibilities of the Central Government to a lower level of government. This policy allows local governments to tax local state enterprises and address social issues (Oi, 1992; Montinola et al., 1995; Qian and Weingast, 1997). The yardstick competition policy involves competition among jurisdictions as regions are compared and evaluated by higher level government bodies in accordance with a set of standardized performance criteria, one of which is the region’s economic performance relative to its peers. The political status of the local government or a local governor’s career in the Central Government is determined by the ranking of local economic performance (Qian and Xu, 1993; Maskin et al., 2000). 2 Hence, state owners that act as major SOE shareholders have incentives to monitor managers and maximize their wealth. Politicians also have incentives to encourage better corporate earnings that promote regional economic performance and allow them to discharge their fiscal responsibilities and stand out in the political competition for career promotion. Anecdotal evidence shows that Chinese leaders of a province or region are promoted to a higher rank as a result of economic success in the province or region they govern. For example, Chen Demin was the Governor of Shanxi province from 2004 to 2006 and was promoted to become the Deputy Director of the National Development and Reform Committee in 2006 after the GDP growth rate ranking of Shanxi rose from 18th in 2003 to number one in 2006. 3 In addition, poor firm performance also limits the latitude and resources available to politicians to help them serve their own personal objectives such as on-the-job consumption and the accumulation of personal wealth, thus further increasing their incentives to dismiss 2 The Central Government rewards or punishes local officials on the basis of economic performance in their region, which motivates them to promote the local economy (Blanchard and Shleifer, 2001). 3 Another example of the promotion of government officials based on provincial economic performance is Bo Xilai. Bo Xilai was the governor of Liaoning province from 2001 to 2004 and was promoted to become the General irector of China’s Department of Commerce in 2004 after the nationwide GDP growth rate ranking of Liaoning province rose from 29th in 2001 to 14th in 2004. 11 relatively poor performing managers (Chang et al., 2009). Based on the objective function of the state owner and government officials, the following hypothesis is proposed: Hypothesis 1 (H1): The likelihood of top management turnover in Chinese SOEs is negatively associated with firm performance. 3.2 Government Control and the Association between Top Management Turnover and Firm Accounting Performance Because the government plays both a political role and a shareholder’s role in statecontrolled business, government control could have both benefits and costs for the corporate governance of SOEs. Strong government control could substitute or complement the governance mechanism of top manager turnover based on poor performance. We discuss these possible effects below. The substitutive effect – Stronger government control could weaken the manager turnover/performance governance mechanism for three reasons. First, as the government has to pull back from its economic objectives to pursue its political or social objectives, its primary selection criterion for SOE managers is not always economic performance; political considerations are often more important factors. Second, government control mainly relies on information obtained through bureaucratic channels rather than on information provided by the capital market (such as the stock market, rating companies, investment banks, or consulting companies). Information on firm performance used to evaluate managers would be noisier with greater government control. Third, bureaucrats from the Party/government departments who exercise government control are not in a position and have no incentive to appoint 12 the best candidates to top management positions because decisions on such appointments are mainly politically motivated. Hence, tight government control is likely to result in SOEs retreating from efficient corporate control mechanisms. The complementary effect – On the other hand, strong government control could strengthen the manager turnover/performance governance mechanism. Unlike in developed economies where there is strong legal protection for investors, creditors have priority of payments over shareholders, and managers and directors can be sued for breach of fiduciary duty (Shleifer et al., 1997; La Porta et al., 2000), all of these investor safeguards are weak in a developing economy like China because of defects in the legal system and law enforcement. Managers are also subject to less pressure from the external managerial labor market and face less legal risk for misconduct. Managers thus have strong incentives to misappropriate state assets rather than achieving wealth maximization for shareholders. Given managers’ self-interest incentives, the exercise of tight government control by adhering to the practice of rewarding or penalizing top managers according to firm performance serves as an important mechanism for disciplining SOE managers and discouraging them from engaging in behavior that reduces the amount of corporate resources over which the government or politicians has (have) stronger interests (Brada, 1996, Tang et al., 1999). Given China’s adoption of fiscal decentralization and yardstick competition policies, we conjecture that in a country that lacks the full market competition and strong legal system of developed countries, strong government control provides a helping hand to Chinese SOEs (Shleifer et al. 1997; La Porta et al., 2000; Qian, 1996; Chang et al, 2004), partly through the adoption of an efficient corporate governance mechanism: turnover in top managers based on poor performance. Recent studies on China’s reforms show that government control in firms remains an influential factor in 13 corporate governance. For example, scholars have recognized the relative success of some government-owned enterprises such as township/village enterprises over private enterprises (Chang et al., 1994; Li, 1996; Che et al., 1998). Qian (2000) also argues that privatization has been delayed in China, just as it has in Eastern European countries such as Poland and Hungary, because maintaining government control has many advantages (Qian, 2000). Hence, the second hypothesis is as follows: Hypothesis 2 (H2): The negative association between top management turnover and firm performance is stronger in SOEs with tight government control. 4 Research Design 4.1 Measures Top management turnover and firm performance Top management turnover ( Turnover ) is an indicator variable equal to 1 if either the Chairman or the Chief Executive Officer (CEO), or both, is (are) forced to leave the firm (other than for natural reasons such as retirement, health, change of ownership, or the end of a temporary appointment as disclosed in the CSMAR database), and 0 otherwise. Firm performance is measured by return on assets lagged one period ( ROAt −1 ), a proxy of previous firm performance (Engel, et al., 2003; Chang and Wong, 2006; Kato and Long, 2006; Weisbach, 1988). Government control Four metrics are used to measure the extent of government control or involvement 14 through property rights in or regulation of SOEs. They are described as follows: i) The concentration of government ownership: because the attributes of ownership determine government shareholder interests in firm performance and internal managerial efforts (Boeker, 1992; Boeker et al., 1993; Denis et al., 1997; Salancik and Pfeffer, 1980), the extent of government control through ownership is measured by its concentration. ii) The jurisdictional level of government ownership: central government and local governments that govern the firm’s business directly are likely to have a greater ability to intervene in the firm’s management than local governments that do not have direct jurisdiction over the firm (Fan et al., 2007). Under China’s planning system, in which blocks or regions are the foundation of the planning system (Maskin et al., 2000; Li et al., 2004), government ownership is affiliated with the following jurisdictional levels of government – central, provincial, municipal, and county (see details in Appendix A). Central government ownership is the key level of government ownership. It is established to form the basis from which China’s top global companies of the future are created and firms owned by the Central Government account for a substantial share of the economy. As central government ownership of companies such as energy or defense-related firms is considered key to national security, the Central Government maintains significant absolute or relative controlling stakes in such enterprises. Hence, SOEs affiliated with the Central Government are under tighter government control than firms affiliated with local governments at three jurisdictional levels: provincial, municipal (or city), and county (or township). iii) The monopolistic position of an SOE: A firm’s monopolistic position is associated with a market share advantage derived from its ability to obtain concessions, licenses, or sizeable government contracts. The Chinese discourse on SOEs contains a 15 number of terms that denote the importance of certain companies and sectors in terms of their market power, such as “backbone enterprises,” “pillar enterprises,” and “giant enterprises”; SOEs described in these terms are normally large firms that hold a monopolistic position in the local economy, are important for generating fiscal revenue, and play a vital role in economic development. 4 The stakes are higher for firms that have monopoly power. Such firms may therefore be more sensitive to political scrutiny and government control (Faccio, 2007). iv) Strategic SOEs: the Chinese Government has identified seven sectors that are considered strategically important as they are related to national or economic security and maintains absolute control in these sectors through either sole ownership or an absolute controlling stake (SASAC Chair Li Rongrong) (Mattlin, 2007). These seven sectors are defense, power generation and distribution, oil and petrochemicals, telecommunications, coal, aviation, and shipping. 5 For SOEs operating in these strategic sectors, regulations dictate that firms’ decision-making procedures are supplanted by the administrative process. The regulatory process that takes place in such enterprises exposes firms’ decision making to more political forces and government control and is likely to result in the imposition of political outcomes in place of private decisions or market outcomes (Hadlock et al., 2002). The strategic status of the industry in which a firm operates thus reflects the extent to which the firm is subject to government control through regulations. 4.2 Model 4 The Chinese Government only recently specifically defined those enterprises that it considered to be critical or important. 5 SASAC Chair Li Rongrong revealed that these seven sectors are considered strategically important as they are related to national or economic security and that the government has to maintain absolute control over firms in these sectors through either sole ownership or an absolute controlling stake. Many of the biggest and most monopolistic Chinese companies operate within these seven industries. 16 To examine the sensitivity of management turnover to accounting measures of firm performance, we apply a logistic model to test H1 as follows. Logit(Turnoverit ) = α + β1 * Performanceit −1 + β 2 * CVit −1 + ε it (1) Where: Turnover = a dummy variable equal to 1 if either the chairman or the chief executive officer (CEO), or both, is (are) forced to leave the firm (other than for natural reasons disclosed in the CSMAR database) and 0 otherwise; Performance = an accounting measure of previous firm performance: return on assets lagged one period ( ROAt −1 ); The definitions of CV , the control variables, are based on previous studies (Berry et al., 2000; Clayton et al., 2003; Fan et al., 2007; Smith and Watts, 1992) and are listed as follows: Log (asset ) : the log of total assets, which is used to measure and control for firm size. Berry et al. (2000) suggest that an increase in size increases management entrenchment so that top executives are less likely to be found to be “incompetent”; Leverage : equal to the ratio of total debt to total assets and used to control for the firm’s financial risk. Gilson (1990) provides evidence that management turnover is more prevalent in financially distressed firms; Indus _ MB : the industry median market-to-book ratio by 2-digit SIC code, a surrogate for the investment opportunity set (IOS). Prior research indicates that the IOS may also be associated with management turnover because firms with a high IOS demand high-quality managers (Smith and Watts, 1992); Log (employee ) : the log of the number of employees. Some researchers argue that management in state enterprises is also evaluated on the basis of social duties such as maintaining and increasing employment (Fan et al., 2007). Hence, the government is 17 likely to replace the top executives if the unemployment rate is too high; Log (GDP ) : the log of provincial GDP, a surrogate for regional variety. This is associated with management turnover because of differences in local labor markets and local economic development (Fan et al., 2007); and Dual : a dummy variable equal to 1 for a manager who simultaneously holds the chairman of the board and CEO positions. Prior studies suggest that the dual position of chairman and CEO results in greater management power and entrenchment as executives who simultaneously occupy both positions are less likely to leave their company. The first hypothesis predicts that β 1 will be negative and is consistent with the disciplinary mechanism in which incompetent managers are dismissed when performance is poor. To test the second hypothesis about the interaction of government control and corporate control, we extend Model 1 as follows. Logit(Turnoverit ) = α + β1 * GCit −1 + β 2 * Performanceit −1 + β 3 * Performanceit −1 * GCit −1 + β 4 CVit −1 + ε it (2) Where: GC is one of four measures of government control which include concentration of government ownership, jurisdictional level of government ownership, the monopolistic position of an SOE, and whether or not the firm is a strategic SOE. These measures are defined as follows. Concentration of government ownership (Own) is a dummy variable equal to 1 if the proportion of shares owned by the government is above the median level for the year and 0 otherwise. Jurisdictional level of government ownership (Central) is a dummy variable equal to 1 for SOEs that are ultimately held by the Central Government and 0 for those owned by a legal person or governed by a local 18 government (provincial, municipal, or county) (Fan et al., 2007; Sun et al., 2003). The monopolistic position of an SOE ( L arg e _ MS ) is a dummy variable equal to 1 if firm i’s market sales are above the median level for the year of all listed firms in the province in which it is located and 0 otherwise. Finally, strategic SOE (Strategic) is a dummy variable equal to 1 for an SOE in a regulated or strategic industry based on the SIC code issued by the China Securities Regulatory Commission (CSRC), China’s equivalent to the SEC. These regulated or strategic industries are described earlier in this paper. All other variables are as defined in Model 1. Hypothesis 2 (H2) focuses on the estimate of the interaction term β 3 , the coefficient of the interaction terms for government control and the turnover-performance relationship. If β 3 is negative, then there is a stronger inverse relationship between top management turnover and firm performance, indicating that stronger government control strengthens the turnover/performance relationship. In contrast, if β 3 is positive, then there is a weaker inverse relationship between top management turnover and firm accounting performance. 5 Data and Sample The sample includes Chinese SOEs that were listed on the domestic Shanghai and Shenzhen stock exchanges during the 2001-2005 period. We identify the ultimate controller by examining the ownership structures of the sample firms as disclosed in their annual reports. The management turnover data are downloaded from the CSMAR dataset. To be included in the sample, firms have to have sufficient accounting data available in the CSMAR dataset. In identifying forced turnover of top managers, we exclude turnover events in which a top manager left because of retirement, health 19 reasons, change of ownership, or the end of a temporary appointment to the position, all of which are natural reasons for turnover. This screening procedure ensures that only forced top management turnovers are captured in our analysis. To mitigate the outlier effect, we truncate the top and bottom 1% of the distribution for return on assets, total assets, net sales, total debt, and earnings before interest and taxes (EBIT). The final sample consists of 918 unique SOE firms and 4,096 firm-year observations. Table 1 reports the descriptive statistics for the sample firms. For each variable used in the regression model, we report the mean, median, and standard deviation across two sets of sample firms, one being the sub-sample in which top management changed during the year and the other sub-sample consisting of firms in which there was no turnover in top management. The first two variables reported in Table 1 are accounting measures of firm performance used in previous studies (Engel et al., 2003; Chang and Wong, 2006; Kato and Long, 2006; Weisbach, 1988). Although the firms with management turnover on average demonstrate both positive current performance ( ROAit ) and positive lagged performance ( ROAit −1 ), they significantly underperform the non-turnover group (t-value = 5.26, significant at the 1% level for ROAit and t-value = 2.27, significant at the 5% level for ROAit-1). The next two variables measure concentration of government ownership. The t-test for the difference between the two sub-samples shows that the ownership proportion for the management turnover group is similar to that of the non-turnover group. The next variable reported in Table 1 is the jurisdictional level of government ownership. We find that management turnover is more likely to occur in SOEs with central government ownership/control. A comparison of SOE market shares in terms of sales shows that the management turnover group has a somewhat lower market share than the non-turnover group. The results also shows that the frequency with which management-turnover firms appear in 20 a strategic industry is significantly lower than that of no-turnover firms, which is consistent with the argument that strategic or regulated industries are subject to less competitive labor market conditions. [Insert Table 1 here] 6 Empirical Results 6.1 Results for the Relationship between Top Management Turnover and Firm Performance (H1) Table 2 presents the correlation matrix of the independent variables included in the logit analysis. Although many of the measures are significantly correlated, the magnitude of the correlations (absolute value < 0.4) does not indicate potential problems of multicollinearity. [Insert Table 2 here] We test the first hypothesis by performing a likelihood analysis in which we regress the likelihood of top management turnover on the accounting performance measure and several control variables in Model 1. The dependent variable is coded 1 for management turnover firm–year observations and 0 for non-turnover observations. Consistent with the hypothesis that the frequency of management turnover is negatively associated with the firm’s prior accounting performance, the results show that the coefficient on firm accounting performance is significantly negative (-1.06; p-value = 0.033). Regarding the control variables in the regression, firm size has a negative but insignificant influence on the likelihood of management turnover. Management turnover is more frequent in firms that face higher financial risks, i.e., firms with higher debt-to-asset ratios, as evidenced by Gilson (1990). The industrial MB ratio has a significantly negative influence on the likelihood of management turnover, implying 21 that growing firms have less management turnover. As expected, the existence of a top manager in a dual role has a significantly negative influence on management turnover. This is consistent with the results of prior studies showing that the appointment of the same individual to the positions of chairman and CEO results in less management turnover because such individuals become entrenched in their positions. Regional variety ( Log (GDP ) ) and social duties ( Log (employ) ) have no significant influence on senior management turnover. [Insert Table 3 here] 6.2 Results for the interaction of Government Control and the TurnoverPerformance Relationship (H2) We next examine whether the inverse relationship between top management turnover and firm accounting performance is stronger or weaker in firms with tighter government control. We test the second hypothesis by estimating a logit model to which we add an interaction term for the firm performance measure and timing as a variable proxy for government control. The four proxies we employ of the extent of government control are concentration of government ownership, jurisdictional level of government ownership, the monopolistic position of the SOE, and whether or not the SOE is in a strategic industry. The first column of Table 4 reports the results for the interaction term including concentration of government ownership. As expected, the coefficient of Performanceit −1 * Ownit −1 is negative and is not statistically significant. The second column of Table 4 reports the results for the interaction term including jurisdictional level of government ownership. For the interaction term including the dummy variable for central or direct local government ownership ( Central ) and 22 previous firm performance, column (2) shows that the coefficient of Performanceit −1 * Central it −1 is negative and significant (-2.78; p value = 0.029). This finding suggests that when an SOE is controlled by the Central Government, rather than by a less powerful local government, the inverse relationship between top management turnover and firm performance is stronger and performance-based turnover decisions are enforced more effectively. The third column of Table 4 reports the results for the interaction term including the monopolistic position of SOEs. The coefficient on the interaction term Performanceit −1 * L arg e _ MS it −1 is negative and significant (-2.25; p-value = 0.051). This finding suggests that SOEs that have a greater market share in the local economy (based on provincial unit) make an important contribution to the fiscal revenue of the local economy and that the government has a greater interest in the firm’s performance, making it more likely that top management turnover will be tied more closely to poor firm performance. The final column of Table 4 reports the results for the interaction term including the strategic importance of SOEs. The results show that the coefficient of Performanceit −1 * Strategicit −1 is negative and significant (-3.56; p-value = 0.001). This finding suggests that for SOEs in one of the seven strategic industrial sectors – defense, power generation and distribution, oil and petrochemicals, telecommunications, coal, aviation and shipping – all of which are subject to more stringent regulatory processes and control, the inverse relationship between top management turnover and firm performance is stronger. [Insert Table 4 here] 7 Additional Tests 23 In this section, we perform additional tests to provide more evidence in support of our findings. 7.1 Regional Institutional Factors We conjecture and find that government control complements and strengthen the corporate control of top-manager turnover in China, an environment that lacks good investor protection and a well-functioning capital market. As argued in this paper, this complementary effect could be affected by the firm’s local institutional conditions and the complementary relation between government control and corporate control is expected to be stronger in regions with poor investor protection or undeveloped market institutions. To investigate the complementary effect in regions with different institutional environments, we stratify the full sample according to regional institutional factors and re-run Model 2 on alternative sub-samples to examine whether the documented relations persist in these sub-samples. We partition the sample by the yearly median value of the ratio of stock market capitalization to local GDP in a given region (province), the number of firms listed in a given region (province), and the number of initial public offerings of equity in a given region (province). La Porta, Lopez-deSilanes, Shleifer and Vishny (1997) use a sample of 49 countries and provide evidence that these three variables measuring the size, breadth, and valuation of capital markets are positively associated with investor protection. We also partition the sample by the yearly median value of the comprehensive marketization index of regions/provinces in China investigated by Fan and Wang (2004, 2007). Table 5 reports the results of the sub-sample regressions. Panel A partitions the sample by the yearly median value of the ratio of stock market capitalization to local GDP in a given region (province). The results show that the interaction of government 24 control and firm performance ( Performanceit −1 * GC it −1 ) is significantly negative if the ratio of the stock market capitalization of firms in the region to local GDP is low where government control is measured by the concentration of government ownership (column (1)) or central/direct local government control (column (2)). However, the inverse relation does not persist or is not significant if the firms are in regions with a high ratio of the stock market capitalization to local GDP. In columns (3) and (4), where the government control is measured by the market shares of firms and strategic industries, respectively, the results for the low and high sub-samples are not significantly different. Panel B partitions the sample by the yearly median value of the number of firms listed in a given region (province) and Panel C divides the sample by the yearly median value of the number of initial public offerings of equity in a given region (province). The results in both panels show that the interaction of government control and firm performance ( Performanceit −1 * GC it −1 ) is persistently negative in regions with a low number of listed firms for all measures of government control. However, the inverse relation does not exist or is not significant for regions with a high number of listed firms. Panel D partitions the sample by the yearly median value of the comprehensive marketization index of regions/provinces in China (Fan and Wang, 2004, 2007). The results show that the interaction of government control and firm performance ( Performanceit −1 * GC it −1 ) is significantly negative if the firms are from regions with low marketization indices, where government control is measured by the concentration of government ownership (column (1)). However, the inverse relation is not significant if the firms are from regions with high marketization indices. In column (2) and column (3), where government control is measured by central/direct local government control and the market shares of firms, respectively, the results for the low and high sub-samples are not significantly different. In column (4), where government 25 control is measured by whether or not the firm is in a strategic industry, the interaction term Performanceit −1 * GC it −1 is significantly negative regardless of whether the firms are from a region with a high or low marketization index. However, the economic effect of the interaction is stronger in the low sub-sample than in the high sub-sample (-4.39 in the low sub-sample vs. -2.30 in the high sub-sample). Overall, the sub-sample regression results corroborate the results in Table 4, providing further support for the argument that the complementary relation between government control and corporate control is more prominent in regions with poor investor protection or poor market institutions. [Insert Table 5 here] 7.2 Endogeneity Concern Due to the fact that government administrators control not only the appointment/dismissal of top managers but also the approval of large investment projects and asset disposals, it is possible that top management turnover and firm performance are both endogenously determined by omitted institutional factors. To address this potential problem, we follow Fan et al. (2007) and re-run Model (1) as in Table 3 on subsamples alternately stratified by firm and regional institutional factors to evaluate whether the documented relations persist in the subsample regressions. Specifically, we partition the sample by the sample median value of (1) local (provincial) GDP, (2) local fiscal deficit levels, (3) local unemployment rates, and 4) firm return on sales (ROS) respectively. Table 6 reports the results of the subsample regressions. Top management turnover is negatively and significantly associated with firm performance regardless of whether they are from regions with high or low GDP, healthy or poor fiscal conditions, high or 26 low employment rates, or whether the SOEs have high or low ROS. The sub-sample regression results confirm that the results in Table 3 are not affected by the regional institutional factors, thus providing additional support for the robustness of the findings. [Insert Table 6 here] 7.3 Alternative Firm Performance Measures An alternative measure for firm performance employed in the prior literature is firm market performance (stock price). We re-run our tests using stock price performance (cumulative return based on 12 monthly returns) and alternatively, Tobin’s Q to measure firm performance. 6 The unreported results show no significant association between management turnover and firm market performance in SOEs. This result is consistent with prior studies using SOEs as the sample. For example, Chang et al. (2004) find that managerial change and selection in Chinese SOEs is not significantly associated with stock price performance because state-owned shares are usually nontradable and can be transferred only on receiving administrative approval. SASAC officials and other bureaucrats who exercise control on behalf of the government are unable to capture any capital gains for themselves when enterprise shares are not transferred. Consequently, state owners may be less concerned about long-term shareholder value as reflected in stock prices; Firth et al. (2006) also show that chairman turnover is related to a firm’s profitability but not to its stock returns in Chinese listed firms. But they don’t provide any explanations; Peng and Luo (2000) (page 492) suggest that ROA is a preferred measure for Chinese firm performance because accounting for assets in China is typically more accurate than that for equity as the equity contributions for a majority of Chinese firms are historically ambiguous, thus 6 , wherein the non-tradable state shareholdings are valued by the market price of tradable state shareholdings. 27 rendering it difficult to compute the stock return. We also conduct robustness tests by using measures of adjusted firm performance such as ROA adjusted by industrial mean ROA. The unreported results are consistent with the results derived using firm-specific ROA and imply that the state owner normally uses earnings as a criterion in making management turnover decisions.7 7.4 Redefining the Concentration of Government Ownership Although the result for the interaction including concentration of government ownership is not significant, government ownership is a critical method of government control. We therefore redefine concentration of government ownership to check on the robustness of the earlier finding. First, we re-run the model by using an indicator variable for a high level of government ownership in which we set the cutoffs for a high degree of government ownership at the 20%, 50%, or 75% shareholding level. The interaction results remain insignificant. Second, we partition the sample into two subsamples according to whether the firm has a high/low proportion of government ownership and run Model 1 using these sub-samples. For both the high and low government ownership level sub-samples, the likelihood of management turnover is significantly inversely associated with the two accounting measures of firm performance. 8 Conclusions This study examines the turnover-performance relationship in Chinese SOEs by first addressing the following question: “is corporate control through performance-based turnover decisions effective in businesses subject to a high degree of government 7 This may be because the government can solicit accounting information (Stigler, 1971; Laffont, 1994) and earnings are a single summary of firm performance that is easily understood. 28 control such as Chinese SOEs, which operate in an institutional environment characterized by a mixture of capitalism and socialism?” Our findings show that the likelihood that top SOE management will be replaced increases when firm accounting performance is poorer. The evidence presented here suggests that given the interests of the Chinese Government in economic performance since it introduced its program of economic reforms, rather than relying on external market pressure, government owners of SOEs adopt a control mechanism that ties top management turnover to firm performance. Second, we investigate the intertwining role government control plays in the corporate governance of Chinese SOEs. We measure government control by four metrics: concentration of government ownership, jurisdictional level of government ownership, the monopolistic position (or market share) of the firm, and whether the firm is in a strategic industry. Overall, the findings show that stronger government control enhances the inverse relationship between top management turnover and firm accounting performance. The results of our additional tests provide further evidence that the complementary relation between government control and corporate control is more prominent in regions with poor investor protection or poor market institutions. Our findings are important given the debate on whether privatization is an essential step for improving the performance of SOEs. Chinese SOEs have been criticized for their potentially inefficient decisions and the ineffectiveness of their governance systems. Despite the criticism of government influence in Chinese enterprises, our results suggest that government control in SOEs plays a positive role in ensuring the establishment of effective internal governance structures and provides a partial explanation for the success of China’s economic reforms. 29 APPENDIX Appendix A: Some key characteristics of jurisdictional regions in China (source: Chinese Government Year Books) 1. Country/township level This level is under the jurisdiction of the municipal level and consists of around 2,148 counties and 48,697 townships. 2. Municipal level This level is under the jurisdiction of the municipal level and consists of around 333 municipalities/cities. 3. Provincial level This level consists of 27 provinces including Hebei, Shanxi, Inner Mongolia, Liaoning, Jilin, Heilongjiang, Jiangsu, Zhejiang, Anhui, Fujian, Jiangxi, Shandong, Henan, Hubei, Hunan, Guangdong, Guangxi, Hainan, Sichuan, Guizhou, Yunnan, Tibet, Shaanxi, Gansu, Qinghai, Ningxia, and Xinjiang, as well as the 4 “directly ruled municipalities” of Beijing, Tianjin, Shanghai, and Chongqing (Chongqing was affiliated with Sichuan Province before 1997 but has been one of the “directly ruled municipalities” since then). 4. Central level The central level is the ultimate level and the Central Government (guided by the Communist Party) holds the ultimate control rights. 30 References: Alchian, A. A. (1965). 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The turnover group, assigned the value of 1, comprises firms in which there was a change in either the chairman or the CEO during the 2001-2005 period; the no-turnover group, assigned the value of 0, comprises firms in which there was no change in top management. Variable N Turnover 1222 1 2874 0 1222 1 ROAt −1 2874 0 1222 1 Own 2874 0 1222 1 High _ Own 2874 0 1222 1 Central 2874 0 1222 1 MS 2874 0 1222 1 L arg e _ MS 2874 0 1222 1 Strategic 2874 0 1222 1 Log (assets) 2874 0 1222 1 Leverageit 2874 0 1222 1 Indus _ MB 2874 0 1222 1 Log (employ) 2874 0 1222 1 Log (GDP ) 2874 0 1222 1 Dual 2874 0 Variable definitions: refer to sections 4.1 and 4.2 ROAt 35 Mean Median 0.009 0.021 0.008 0.020 0.391 0.389 0.404 0.385 0.258 0.230 0.290 0.303 0.516 0.556 0.555 0.585 21.14 21.24 0.509 0.480 2.507 2.462 7.380 7.454 8.538 8.563 0.061 0.102 0.019 0.025 0.024 0.030 0.390 0.385 0 0 0 0 0.093 0.110 1 1 1 1 21.11 21.18 0.491 0.475 2.259 2.243 7.430 7.565 8.596 8.596 0 0 Std. Dev. 0.067 0.058 0.164 0.119 0.148 0.144 0.491 0.487 0.438 0.421 0.363 0.362 0.500 0.497 0.497 0.493 0.818 0.791 0.339 0.240 1.037 0.942 1.226 1.170 0.837 0.799 0.240 0.302 Diff. (1-0) (t-test) -0.012 (5.26***) -0.012 (2.27**) 0.002 (-0.20) 0.019 (-1.16) 0.028 (-1.86*) -0.013 (1.05) -0.040 (2.35**) -0.030 (1.76*) -0.10 (3.60***) 0.029 (-2.77***) 0.045 (-1.32) -0.074 (1.78*) -0.025 (0.87) -0.041 (4.53***) Table 2: Pearson correlations between independent variables (p-value in parentheses) Variable ROA(t) ROA(t-1) Own Central MS Strategic Log(asset) Leverage Indus_MB Log(GDP) Log(employ) Dual ROA (t) ROA (t-1) Own Central MS Strategic Log (asset) Leverage Indus _MB Log (GDP) Log (employ) Dual 1 0.19 (<.01***) 0.12 (<.01***) 0.03 (0.04**) 0.06 (<.01***) 0.07 (<.01***) 0.21 (<.01***) -0.30 (<.01***) 0.08 (<.01***) 0.03 (0.03**) 0.05 (0.00***) -0.03 (0.03**) 1 0.06 (0.00***) -0.01 (0.51) 0.07 (<.01***) 0.03 (0.09*) 0.13 (<.01***) -0.31 (<.01***) 0.03 (0.05**) -0.00 (0.76) 0.02 (0.12) -0.04 (0.01***) 1 0.07 (<.01***) 0.02 (0.16) 0.10 (<.01***) 0.12 (<.01***) -0.11 (<.01***) -0.00 (0.97) 0.02 (0.28) 0.08 (<.01***) -0.06 (<.01***) 1 -0.10 (<.01***) 0.14 (<.01***) 0.00 (0.98) -0.01 (0.45) 0.04 (0.01***) -0.00 (0.94) -0.03 (0.06**) -0.05 (<.01***) 1 0.06 (<.01***) 0.16 (<.01***) -0.03 (0.06*) -0.03 (0.09*0 -0.07 (<.01***) 0.22 (<.01***) -0.02 (0.30) 1 0.03 (0.03**) -0.06 (0.00***) -0.07 (<.01***) -0.05 (<.01***) 0.15 (<.01***) -0.07 (<.01***) Note: *** = p < 1%, ** = p < 5%, * = p < 10%. 36 1 0.01 (0.46) -0.13 (<.01***) 0.12 (<.01***) 0.42 (<.01***) -0.02 (0.22) 1 -0.09 (<.01***) 0.06 (0.00***) 0.04 (0.02**) 0.02 (0.14) 1 -0.19 (<.01***) -0.03 (0.10*) -0.03 (0.03**) 1 0.03 (0.04**) -0.02 (0.31) 1 -0.02 (0.29) 1 Table 3: The Relationship Between Management Turnover and Firm Performance (Model 1) See section 4.1 and 4.2 for variable definitions. The dependent variable is the likelihood of management turnover. Performanceit −1 is measured by accounting measures, ROA is lagged one period. (P-value in parentheses: *** p < 1%, ** p < 5%, * < 10%) Variable Expected sign Intercept Performanceit −1 - Log (assetsit −1 ) - Leverageit −1 + Indus _ MBit −1 + Log (GDPit −1 ) +/- Log (employit −1 ) - Dualit −1 - -0.54 (0.014***) -0.58 (0.030**) Yes Yes 4096 0.014 Year _ dummy Indus _ dummy Obs. # Pseudo-R-sq 37 7.74 (<.0001***) -1.06 (0.033**) -0.07 (0.236) 0.40 (0.018**) -1.12 (<.0001***) 0.01 (0.809) -0.03 (0.519 -0.51 (<.0001***) Yes Yes 4096 0.12 Table 4: The influence of government control ( GCit −1 ) on the relationship between top management turnover and firm accounting performance measures with control variables (Model 2) See sections 4.1 and 4.2 for variable definitions. The dependent variable is the likelihood of management turnover. Performanceit −1 is measured by ROA lagged one period. GC it −1 is defined as: (1) the concentration of government ownership, measured by a dummy equal to 1 if the proportion of ownership is above the median level for the year; (2) jurisdictional government control, measured by a dummy variable equal to 1 if the SOE is affiliated with the Central Government; (3) monopolistic position of SOE, measured by a dummy variable equal to 1 if the SOE’s market sales are above the median level of sales in the provincial unit where it is located; (4) the strategic industries, measured by a dummy variable equal to 1 if the SOE is in one of seven industries which are strategically regulated by the government. (P-value in parentheses: *** p < 1%, ** p < 5%, * < 10%) Variable Intercept Performanceit −1 GCit −1 (1) GC = Government Ownership (%) above median 7.76 (<.0001***) +/- Expected sign Performanc e it −1 * GC it −1 - Log (assetsit −1 ) - (2) GC = Central Government Control 3.42 (0.008***) (3) GC = Monopolistic Position by Market Share 6.87 (<.0001***) (4) GC = Strategic Industries 7.13 (<.0001***) -1.03 (0.132) 1.52 (0.214) -0.48 (0.408) 0.02 (0.977) 0.04 (0.650) -0.95 (0.211) -0.05 (0.672) -0.08 (0.469) -0.13 (0.109) -2.58 (0.049**) -2.25 (0.051**) -3.56 (0.001***) -0.07 -0.14 -0.03 -0.06 (0.229) (0.020**) (0.704) (0.313) Leverageit −1 + 0.41 (0.017**) 0.32 (0.045**) 0.40 (0.018**) 0.43 (0.013***) Indus _ MBit −1 + -1.12 (<.0001***) -0.29 (<.0001***) -1.12 (<.0001***) -1.02 (<.0001***) Log (GDPit −1 ) +/- 0.01 (0.812) -0.03 (0.503) 0.006 (0.915) 0.02 (0.641) Log (employit −1 ) - -0.03 (0.518) 0.02 (0.654) -0.02 (0.621) -0.02 (0.617) Dualit −1 - -0.51 (<.0001***) -0.62 (<.0001***) -0.50 (0.001***) -0.51 (<.0001***) Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes 4096 0.12 Yes 4096 0.04 Yes 4096 0.08 Yes 4096 0.12 Year _ dummy Indus _ dummy Obs. # Pseudo R-sq. 38 Table 5: Regression results of the interaction effects of government control and turnover-performance relationship in China’s SOEs using sub-samples stratified by regional institutional factors used as proxies for investor protection or market development. The sample is partitioned alternatively by the yearly median value of the ratio of stock market capitalization to local GDP in a given region (province), the number of firms listed in a given region (province), the number of initial public offerings of equity in a given region (province) (La Porta, Lopez-de-Silanes, Shleifer and Vishny (LLSV), 1997) and the comprehensive marketization index of regions/provinces in China investigated by Fan and Wang (FW) (2004, 2007). The dependent variable is the likelihood of management turnover. Performanceit −1 is measured by ROA lagged one period. GC it −1 is defined as: (1) the concentration of government ownership, measured by a dummy equal to 1 if the proportion of ownership is above the median level for the year; (2) jurisdictional government control, measured by a dummy variable equal to 1 if the SOE is affiliated with the Central Government or is directly held by a local government; (3) monopolistic position of SOE, measured by a dummy variable equal to 1 if the SOE’s market sales are above the median level of sales in the provincial unit where it is located; (4) the strategic industries, measured by a dummy variable equal to 1 if the SOE is in one of seven industries which are strategically regulated by the government. (P-value in parentheses: *** p < 1%, ** p < 5%, * < 10%) GC(1) GC(2) GC(3) GC(4) Panel A: partition by the stock market Expected capitalization in a given region (LLSV, 1997) sign Low High Low High Low High Low High Intercept -0.40 9.11 -0.82 9.07 -2.06 8.06 -1.01 8.86 (0.824) (<.0001***) (0.649 (<.0001***) (0.330) (0.001***) (0.545) (<.0001***) Performanc e it − 1 - 0.06 (0.939) -0.49 (0.331) (1.78 (0.421) 1.26 (0.382) -1.39 (0.108) 0.30 (0.674) -0.34 (0.631) 1.38 (0.177) GCit −1 +/- 0.20 (0.086*) 0.04 (0.745) -0.31 (0.072*) 0.29 (0.129) -0.21 (0.131 -0.12 (0.478) -0.12 (0.273) 0.04 (0.748) Performanc e it −1 * GC it −1 -/+ -3.91 (0.009***) 0.58 (0.554) -3.92 (0.094*) -1.79 (0.236) 0.78 (0.530) -1.13 (0.272) -3.43 (0.016**) -3.07 (0.046**) 0.008 -0.36 0.03 -0.36 0.09 -0.30 0.01 -0.35 (0.926) (0.0002***) (0.686) (0.0002***) (0.395) (0.009***) (0.861) (0.0002***) Log ( assets it −1 ) - Leverageit −1 + 0.43 (0.029**) -0.16 (0.677) 0.39 (0.042**) -0.15 (0.691) 0.44 (0.027**) -0.12 (0.754) 0.42 (0.029**) 0.08 (0.826) Indus _ MB + -0.30 (0.003***) 0.08 (0.279) -0.38 (0.0003***) -0.28 (0.0004***) -0.24 (0.019**) 0.08 (0.308) -0.40 (0.0002***) -0.28 (0.0006***) -0.28 (0.005***) 0.09 (0.248) -0.37 (0.0003***) -0.29 (0.0003***) -0.30 (0.001***) 0.10 (0.208) -0.35 (0.0004***) -0.25 (0.001***) Log ( GDP it − 1 it − 1 ) +/- Log (employit −1 ) - -0.08 (0.142) 0.22 (0.002***) -0.07 (0.190) 0.21 (0.003***) -0.08 (0.177) 0.23 (0.002***) -0.07 (0.177) 0.18 (0.005***) Dual - -0.50 (0.012***) -0.86 (0.002***) -0.56 (0.005***) -0.89 (0.002***) -0.53 (0.007***) -0.84 (0.003***) -0.54 (0.005***) -0.75 (0.006***) Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes 2344 0.04 Yes 1718 0.09 Yes 2344 0.04 Yes 1718 0.09 Yes 2344 0.04 Yes 1718 0.09 Yes 2344 0.04 Yes 1718 0.07 it − 1 Year _ dummy Indus _ dummy Obs. # Pseudo R-sq. 39 Panel B: partition by the number of firms listed in a given region (LLSV, 1997) Intercept Performanceit −1 GC(1) Expected sign - GCit −1 +/- Performanc e it −1 * GC it −1 -/+ GC(2) GC(3) GC(4) Low 6.46 (0.003***) High 2.69 (0.100*) Low 6.22 (0.005***) High 2.66 (0.104*) Low 2.19 (0.406) High 3.17 (0.100*) Low 6.45 (0.002***) High 2.48 (0.112) 1.00 (0.410) -0.56 (0.238) 2.82 (0.277) 0.76 (0.514) 0.58 (0.624) -0.60 (0.286) 1.55 (0.316) 0.10 (0.857) 0.26 (0.085*) -6.96 (0.003***) 0.01 (0.923) -0.08 (0.919) -0.20 (0.325) -4.61 (0.104*) -0.08 (0.620) -1.69 (0.179) -0.46 (0.012****) -3.27 (0.119) 0.06 (0.638) 0.01 (0.985) 0.25 (0.088*) -4.50 (0.026**) -0.26 (0.013***) -2.27 (0.073*) Log (assetsit −1 ) - -0.31 (0.004***) -0.07 (0.338) -0.31 (0.005***) -0.07 (0.376) -0.12 (0.343) -0.10 (0.290) -0.35 (0.0006***) -0.05 (0.526) Leverageit −1 + -0.04 (0.920) 0.47 (0.015**) -0.19 (0.650) 0.46 (0.016**) 0.03 (0.944) 0.47 (0.015**) 0.21 (0.606) 0.45 (0.017**) Indus _ MBit −1 + -0.23 (0.053**) -0.32 (0.0003***) -0.19 (0.106) -0.32 (0.0004***) -0.21 (0.083*) -0.32 (0.0003***) -0.26 (0.022**) -0.32 (0.0001***) Log (GDPit −1 ) +/- -0.10 (0.214) -0.11 (0.164 -0.08 (0.317) -0.12 (0.131) -0.09 (0.289) -0.11 (0.171) -0.08 (0.320) -0.09 (0.221) Log (employit −1 ) - 0.19 (0.015**) -0.04 (0.417) 0.21 (0.008***) -0.04 (0.458) 0.22 (0.006***) -0.04 (0.385) 0.21 (0.004***) -0.07 (0.113) Dualit −1 - -0.45 (0.057*) -0.80 (0.0003***) -0.48 (0.042**) -0.81 (0.0003***) -0.40 (0.092*) -0.80 (0.0003***) -0.35 (0.128) -0.80 (0.0003***) Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes 1515 0.07 Yes 2547 0.05 Yes 1515 0.07 Yes 2547 0.05 Yes 1515 0.07 Yes 2547 0.05 Yes 1515 0.05 Yes 2547 0.05 Year _ dummy Indus _ dummy Obs. # Pseudo R-sq. 40 Panel C: partition by the number of initial public offerings of equity in a given region (LLSV, 1997) Intercept Performanceit −1 GC(1) Expected sign - GCit −1 +/- Performanc e it −1 * GC it −1 -/+ GC(2) GC(3) GC(4) Low 0.18 (0.930) High 6.20 (0.009***) Low -0.18 (0.933) High 5.92 (0.013***) Low 0.30 (0.903) High 2.65 (0.339) Low -0.62 (0.758) High 5.70 (0.010***) -0.70 (0.295) 0.07 (0.936) 5.69 (0.091*) 0.31 (0.770) -1.09 (0.246) 0.05 (0.951) -1.00 (0.295) 1.05 (0.263) 0.12 (0.368) -3.87 (0.026**) 0.25 (0.096*) 0.09 (0.942) -0.03 (0.907) -9.01 (0.010***) -0.11 (0.618) -0.30 (0.817) 0.11 (0.536) -3.39 (0.086*) -0.44 (0.023**) 0.54 (0.734) -0.07 (0.579) -2.50 (0.152) -0.29 (0.046**) -3.36 (0.053**) Log (assetsit −1 ) - -0.01 (0.893) -0.28 (0.014***) 0.02 (0.857) -0.26 (0.023***) -0.02 (0.874) -0.10 (0.478) 0.02 (0.828) -0.21 (0.051**) Leverageit −1 + 0.46 (0.032**) 0.02 (0.962) 0.45 (0.038**) -0.04 (0.922) 0.50 (0.028**) -0.003 (0.995) 0.47 (0.032**) 0.08 (0.843) Indus _ MBit −1 + -0.27 (0.009***) -0.36 (0.003***) -0.23 (0.030**) -0.34 (0.006***) -0.26 (0.012***) -0.34 (0.004***) -0.27 (0.005***) -0.30 (0.007***) Log (GDPit −1 ) +/- 0.01 (0.920) -0.20 (0.093*) -0.02 (0.842) -0.22 (0.078*) 0.02 (0.822) -0.24 (0.052**) 0.03 (0.787) -0.18 (0.137) Log (employit −1 ) - -0.005 (0.945) 0.10 (0.173) -0.01 (0.906) 0.11 (0.165) -0.02 (0.764) 0.12 (0.118) -0.03 (0.615) 0.05 (0.473) Dualit −1 - -0.45 (0.062*) -0.86 (0.009***) -0.51 (0.036**) -0.89 (0.007***) -0.45 (0.065*) -0.88 (0.008***) -0.47 (0.049**) -0.89 (0.006***) Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes 1756 0.06 Yes 1360 0.08 Yes 1756 0.07 Yes 1360 0.08 Yes 1756 0.06 Yes 1360 0.08 Yes 1756 0.04 Yes 1360 0.05 Year _ dummy Indus _ dummy Obs. # Pseudo R-sq. 41 GC(1) Panel D: partition by regional market index (FW, 2007) Intercept Performanceit −1 Expected sign - GCit −1 +/- Performanc e it −1 * GC it −1 -/+ GC(2) GC(3) GC(4) Low 7.43 (0.006***) High 2.19 (0.174) Low 7.98 (0.003***) High 2.15 (0.182) Low 5.68 (0.075*) High 1.35 (0.464) Low 7.24 (0.004***) High 2.04 (0.189) 0.42 (0.706) -0.43 (0.338) 1.52 (0.488) 1.39 (0.324) -0.24 (0.835) -0.40 (0.478) 1.52 (0.288) 0.07 (0.900) 0.06 (0.715) -5.45 (0.030**) 0.15 (0.133) -0.39 (0.619) -0.04 (0.861) -2.73 (0.268) -0.04 (0.776) -2.46 (0.101) -0.27 (0.202) -0.60 (0.785) -0.11 (0.369) -0.32 (0.700) 0.13 (0.406) -4.39 (0.024**) -0.17 (0.097*) -2.30 (0.067*) Log (assetsit −1 ) - -0.28 (0.038**) -0.10 (0.143) -0.30 (0.026**) -0.10 (0.182) -0.19 (0.227) -0.06 (0.495) -0.29 (0.020**) -0.10 (0.159) Leverageit −1 + 0.05 (0.918) 0.40 (0.027**) 0.03 (0.956) 0.37 (0.039**) 0.11 (0.805) 0.40 (0.028**) 0.30 (0.498) 0.38 (0.032**) Indus _ MBit −1 + -0.40 (0.002***) -0.29 (0.001***) -0.41 (0.002***) -0.28 (0.001***) -0.40 (0.002***) -0.29 (0.001***) -0.41 (0.001***) -0.29 (0.0003***) Log (GDPit −1 ) +/- -0.17 (0.082*) 0.02 (0.799) -0.18 (0.064*) 0.006 (0.941) -0.18 (0.061*) 0.006 (0.939) -0.14 (0.125) 0.02 (0.801) Log (employit −1 ) - 0.12 (0.214) -0.01 (0.865) 0.13 (0.191) -0.006 (0.896) 0.14 (0.166) -0.005 (0.925) 0.11 (0.239) -0.01 (0.843) Dualit −1 - -0.71 (0.022**) -0.57 (0.003***) -0.75 (0.017**) -0.59 (0.002***) -0.71 (0.023**) -0.57 (0.002***) -0.73 (0.019) -0.57 (0.002***) Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes 1098 0.07 Yes 2943 0.04 Yes 1098 0.07 Yes 2943 0.04 Yes 1098 0.07 Yes 2943 0.03 Yes 1098 0.06 Yes 2943 0.03 Year _ dummy Indus _ dummy Obs. # Pseudo R-sq. 42 Table 6: We re-run Model (1) (as in Table 3) on subsamples alternately stratified by firm and regional institutional factors to examine whether the predicted relations persist in the subsample regressions (Fan et al., 2007). We partition the sample by the sample median value of (1) local (provincial) GDP, (2) local fiscal deficit levels, (3) local unemployment rates, and 4) firm return on sales (ROS). The negative relations between top management turnover and firm’s performance (ROA) are robust in the subsamples. Expected sign Intercept Performanc Log ( assets e it − 1 it −1 ) Leverageit −1 Indus _ MB Log ( GDP - + it − 1 it − 1 ) Log (employ it −1 ) Dual it − 1 Year _ dummy Indus _ dummy Obs. # Pseudo R-sq. - (1) GDP Low High 30.48 22.98 (0.906) (0.928) -4.42 -5.00 (0.086*) (<.001***) (2) Fiscal deficit Low High 22.21 27.18 (0.893) (0.904) -5.40 -5.04 (0.004***) (0.029**) (3) Unemployment rate Low High 27.59 21.37 (0.873) (0.920) -4.29 -5.33 (0.009***) (0.009***) (4) ROS Low High 28.18 23.03 (0.863) (0.919) -5.35 -4.39 (0.002***) (0.026**) -0.53 (0.019**) -0.19 (0.059*) -0.19 (0.060*) -0.41 (0.042**) -0.49 (<.001***) -0.11 (0.419) -0.38 (0.004***) -0.26 (0.044**) -0.30 (0.740) -2.06 0.26 (0.541) -1.17 0.46 (0.300) -1.19 -0.69 (0.381) -1.90 -0.05 (0.926) -1.49 0.70 (0.262) -1.26 0.88 (0.135) -2.04 -0.23 (0.658) -0.93 (<.001***) (<.001***) (<.001***) (<.001***) (<.001***) (<.001***) (<.001***) (<.001***) 0.00 (0.522) 0.00 (0.148) +0.00 (0.080*) 0.00 (0.362) 0.00 (0.194) 0.00 (0.282) 0.00 (0.220) 0.00 (0.951) 0.21 (0.149) 0.46 (0.238) Yes Yes 971 0.18 -0.04 (0.546) -0.43 (0.065*) Yes Yes 3125 0.12 -0.06 (0.343) -0.36 (0.125) Yes Yes 2945 0.12 0.23 (0.081*) 0.13 (0.715) Yes Yes 1151 0.17 0.188 (0.038**) -0.60 (0.028**) Yes Yes 2285 0.16 -0.12 (0.130) 0.11 (0.702) Yes Yes 1811 0.13 0.03 (0.754) -0.41 0.164 Yes Yes 2021 0.18 0.021 (0.788) -0.10 (0.713) Yes Yes 2075 0.09 43