Refinancing Constraints and Labor Hiring: The Role of Financial Reporting Quality

dc.contributor.author Jung, Boochun
dc.contributor.author Lee, Woo-Jong
dc.contributor.author Weber, David
dc.contributor.author Yang, Daniel
dc.date.accessioned 2017-12-21T21:10:18Z
dc.date.available 2017-12-21T21:10:18Z
dc.date.issued 2017-08-31
dc.description Inquiries about this document can be made to <a href="mailto:HARC@hawaii.edu">HARC@hawaii.edu</a>
dc.description.abstract Recent studies highlight the adverse effect of financing frictions on corporate employment. In this paper, we hypothesize and find that high quality financial reporting mitigates the negative effect of refinancing constraints on firms’ labor hiring, where refinancing constraints are identified by significant levels of maturing long-term debt. We further find that financial reporting quality facilitates firms’ hiring activities by mitigating the adverse effect of refinancing constraints on new debt issuance. In addition, we show that the mitigating role of financial reporting quality in the negative relation between refinancing constraints and corporate employment decisions is more pronounced for financially constrained firms and for labor-intense firms. Overall, our study contributes new evidence on the role of high quality financial reporting in facilitating firms’ abilities to maintain and expand their labor forces, particularly when facing significant refinancing constraints.
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/10125/51971
dc.subject labor
dc.subject financial reporting quality
dc.subject debt maturity
dc.subject refinancing risk
dc.title Refinancing Constraints and Labor Hiring: The Role of Financial Reporting Quality
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