Abstract
AbstractFrom 2008 to 2020, 180 of S&P 1500 have disclosed employee diversity targets. We conduct the first analysis of firms’ employee diversity targets and ask three research questions: (i) who announces diversity targets? (ii) do firms deliver on their diversity targets? (iii) what are the implications of disclosure of such targets for employee hiring and investors? We find that firms with a greater willingness (proxied by past ESG penalties, higher CEO-to-median employee pay ratio, more media coverage, and after #MeToo and Black Lives Matter movements) and ability (proxied by financial strength, a blue-collar heavy labor force, and gender and ethnic minorities on boards) to improve employee diversity are more likely to disclose diversity targets. Exploiting the Revelio dataset of 15,639 firm-years for 1,203 distinct firms from 2008 to 2020, we observe that firms that disclosed a diversity target have indeed hired more diverse employees, but such diversity levels had already increased substantially prior to the target disclosure. Firms with numerical, forward-looking, and rank-and-file employee-targeted goals are associated with greater employee diversity relative to firms that announce other types of diversity goals. Moreover, improved diversity performance does not appear to occur at the cost of employee quality, as measured by Revelio. Overall our results have practical implications for how investors and stakeholders might want to interpret corporate diversity targets.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Reference51 articles.
1. Amel-Zadeh, A., and G. Serafeim. 2018. Why and how investors use ESG information: evidence from a global survey. Financial Analysts Journal 74 (3): 87–103.
2. Andreani, M., A. Ellahie, and L. Shivakumar. 2022. Are CEOs rewarded for luck? Evidence from corporate tax windfalls. Working paper. https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=4187942. Accessed 5 Mar 2024.
3. Baker, A., D. F. Larcker, C. McClure, D. Saraph, and E. M. Watts. 2022. Diversity washing. Working paper. https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=4298626. Accessed 5 Mar 2024.
4. Ben-Amar, W., M. Chang, and P. McIlkenny. 2017. Board gender diversity and corporate response to sustainability initiatives: evidence from the Carbon Disclosure Project. Journal of Business Ethics 142: 369–383.
5. Bermiss, Y. S., J. Green, and J. R. M. Hand. 2023. Does greater diversity in executive race/ethnicity reliably predict better future firm financial performance? Working paper. https://ssrn.com/abstract=4576173. Accessed 5 Mar 2024.