Added Oct 25, 2021
3 min
The impact of family-based human capital on corporate innovation: Evidence from siblingchairpersons in China
Abstract
We examine the impact of family-based human capital stemming from a chairperson’s having siblings vis-à-vis not having siblings on corporate innovation in Chinese family firms. Using hand-collected data, we document that when a firm has a sibling-chairperson, it holds more patents, receives more total citations to their patents, and has greater innovation efficiency and innovation quality than an otherwise equivalent firm with a chairperson with no siblings. The results are economically significant and robust to a battery of alternative methods. Specifically, the findings remain intact after using China’s one-child policy as an exogenous shock to apply a regression discontinuity research design to mitigate endogeneity. Additional analysis suggests that the mechanisms behind the impact of siblings on innovation are consistent with family-based human capital embedded in the sibling relationships such as competition and knowledge spillover among siblings. Furthermore, we show that sibling co-management, sibling gender diversity, and siblings’ collaborative behavior matter in corporate innovation. Overall, family-based human capital from siblings impacts corporate innovation.
JEL Classification
G18, G30,O31
Suggested Citation
Agarwal, Sumit and Chan, Johnny and Chen, Qinyuan and Xie, Rongrong and Xu, Nianhang, The Impact of Family-Based Human Capital on Corporate Innovation: Evidence from Sibling-Chairpersons in China (October 21, 2021). Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=3947128 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.3947128
Partners
Chan, K, Q. Chen, R. Xie, N. Xu
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