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Article
CEO Age and the Persistence of Internal Control Deficiencies
Journal of Accounting and Finance (2018)
  • Hanmei Chen, Western Washington University
  • Shaowen Hua, La Salle University
  • Xiaojie Christine Sun, California State University
Abstract
Upper Echelon theory (Hambrick and Mason, 1984) allows researchers to investigate executives’ decision-making process through their personal traits. This paper investigates the impact of CEO age on the long-term internal control quality. We examine the association between CEO age and the persistence of internal control deficiency. Using the number of material weaknesses in the future (one to five years) as the proxy of persistence of internal control deficiency, we find that companies with older CEOs tend to have less material weaknesses in the future. Furthermore, we also examine the impact of other CEO characteristics and CEO turnover on the persistence of internal control deficiencies. These results indicate that management, especially CEO’s personal traits have significant impact on a company’s policies regarding to internal control.
Keywords
  • Accounting,
  • Finance,
  • CEO's
Publication Date
October 8, 2018
DOI
10.33423/jaf.v18i7.459
Citation Information
Hanmei Chen, Shaowen Hua and Xiaojie Christine Sun. "CEO Age and the Persistence of Internal Control Deficiencies" Journal of Accounting and Finance Vol. 18 Iss. 7 (2018) p. 24 - 49
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/shaowen-hua/3/