We investigate the relevance of the characteristics of Ministers of Finance as an influence on the development of stock returns, sovereign yields and fiscal outcomes, which result from the implementation of their fiscal policies. For a panel of 27 EU countries, covering the period of 1980-2012, we find that academic background, tenure and gender, play a role in determining stock and bond market returns, as well as the general fiscal position of governments. ; UECE is supported by the Fundacão para a Ciência e a Tecnologia (Portuguese Foundation for Science and Technology) through the PEst-OE/EGE/UI0436/2011 project. Advance is supported by the FCT.
In the aftermath of the Global and Financial Crisis (GFC), between 2013 and 2015, the Portuguese government revoked four holidays for both public sector and private employees. We test whether the revocation had an effect on labour productivity in State-Owned Enterprises (SOEs) in Portugal. Moreover, we also study whether such effects are different taking into account the SOEs managed by the Central Government or the Local and Regional Governments. Our results show that revocation of holidays did not impact labour productivity for either central or local and regional government managed SOEs. Though revocation of holidays espoused to improve productivity, the policy seems to have served a ceremonial purpose, but not an economic one.
In: Knowledge and process management: the journal of corporate transformation ; the official journal of the Institute of Business Process Re-engineering, Band 21, Heft 2, S. 103-111
In the aftermath of the Global and Financial Crisis (GFC), between 2013 and 2015, the Portuguese government revoked four holidays for both public sector and private employees. We test whether the revocation had an effect on labour productivity in State-Owned Enterprises (SOEs) in Portugal. Moreover, we also study whether such effects are different taking into account the SOEs managed by the Central Government or the Local and Regional Governments. Our results show that revocation of holidays did not impact labour productivity for either central or local and regional government managed SOEs. Though revocation of holidays espoused to improve productivity, the policy seems to have served a ceremonial purpose, but not an economic one ; info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion
Purpose Building on contingency theory, this paper aims to investigate the extent to which the "4Ps international adaptation strategy" and internationalization intensity shape the servitization–profitability relationship.
Design/methodology/approach The authors use primary (survey) and secondary (archival) data to perform multiple regression analysis.
Findings The results indicate a positive relationship between servitization and profitability, and international intensity strengthens this association. The effects, however, are not consistent across the 4Ps – the price international adaptation strategy strengthens the positive relationship between servitization and profitability, while product and place international adaptation strategies weaken that relationship.
Practical implications The findings have implications for the role of international intensity and the 4Ps in the marketing servitization context.
Originality/value The study provides guidance for small firms in realizing higher performance by leveraging the 4Ps in the servitization context. Counter to expectations, placement and product lead to lower performance with increasing servitization, whereas price strengthens this relationship. The study adds to the international industrial management and marketing literature, providing evidence that contingency factors such as international marketing mix adaptation/standardization strategies moderate the servitization–profitability relationship.
Purpose This study aims to analyze the interplay between male and female board members' beliefs about women's competence to fill board positions (valence), the perceived benefits of a greater gender-balanced boardroom (value) and the significance attributed to the gender quota law as a relevant instrument in eliciting change in board composition.
Design/methodology/approach Looking through the lens of expectancy-value theory, the authors investigate whether the perceived benefits of a gender quota law mediate the path between the beliefs about women's competence to become board members and the perceived benefits of a greater gender-balanced representation in the boardroom. In addition, the authors investigate whether female and male board members share the same beliefs about a gender-balanced representation.
Findings The results show that there are differences in beliefs about women's competencies to become board members and the perceived benefits of a greater gender-balanced boardroom. Female board members hold stronger beliefs on the competence of women to fill board positions and, thus, assign greater importance to the gender quota law, which, in turn, impacts the greater significance attributed to equal representation of women in the boardroom.
Practical implications The findings shed new light on the debate concerning gender quotas aimed at promoting gender-balanced boardrooms by pointing out that differences in value expectations between male and female board members may prevent intraboard gender-equal dynamics.
Originality/value The study contributes to the literature by adding new insights on how male and female board members perceive the value of legally bound gender quotas, in association with their beliefs about women's competence to fill board positions (valence) and their expectations in terms of the beneficial outcomes of a more gender-balanced board composition.
Purpose This study aims to provide a comparative portrait of the profile of men and women in the boardrooms of listed companies (Euronext Lisbon, Portugal) during the first stage of the gender quota law, by comparing the profile of those board members appointed before the mandated quota law and those appointed after it. This study also seeks to contribute to a critical review of the main reservations expressed by some core institutional actors, who initially voiced their concern that it might be difficult to find women in equal conditions to men in terms of their cumulative experience and qualifications to serve as board members.
Design/methodology/approach In addition to providing a comparative descriptive analysis of male and female board members' profiles before and after the mandated gender quota law, an aggregate professional endowments measure (professional endowments Index) is also calculated.
Findings The research findings show that, in the first stage of the quota law, men and women appointed as board members after the mandated gender quota law are fundamentally similar in their professional attributes, forming a more homogeneous boardroom than those holding board positions before it.
Originality/value This study contributes to the literature on the profile of the men and women serving on the publicly listed company boards in Portugal, by comparing their profiles before and after the mandated gender quota law. This study also fills a gap in the literature, as studies about gender quotas and corporate boards relating to Portugal and Southern European countries in general are still relatively scant. To the best of the authors' knowledge, this is the first study carried out into the gender quota law on corporate boards in Portugal.
This paper looks at the impact of the new regulatory framework in Portugal that came into force in January 2018, the so-called gender quota law that relates to the gender composition of the boardrooms of companies listed on the Euronext Lisbon Stock Exchange and in the public sector. It begins by contextualising the debate about the underrepresentation of women on boards and the new binding policy framework that has been introduced in the European Union (EU) and Portugal. The paper then examines the data relating to the representation of men and women on the boards of public listed companies (PLCs). It is concluded that the introduction of binding legal targets in Portugal has accelerated the movement towards a greater representation of women on the boards of PLCs, giving an added impulse to the longstanding, but slow progress generated by the incentives that were designed to encourage voluntary action on the part of the companies themselves, and to promote self-regulatory measures. One of the fundamental challenges lying ahead is to move from a greater numerical gender balance to s ubstantive gender equality in the boardroom, while also increasing the representation of women in positions of power and with influence over decision-making. ; Este artigo analisa o impacto do novo marco regulatório que entrou em vigor em Portugal em janeiro de 2018, a chamada lei das cotas de gênero, que determina uma composição mais equilibrada de mulheres e homens nos conselhos de administração das empresas cotadas na Bolsa de ValoresEuronext Lisbon e das empresas do setor público. O artigo começa por contextualizar o debate sobre a sub-representação de mulheres nos conselhos de administração e sobre o novo marco de políticas com efeito vinculativo, introduzido em vários países da União Europeia (UE) e em Portugal. Examina, em seguida, os dados relativos à representação de homens e mulheres nos conselhos de administração das empresas cotadas em bolsa. Conclui-se que a introdução desta medida legislativa de natureza vinculativa em Portugal acelerou o movimento em direção a uma maior representação das mulheres nos conselhos de administração das empresas cotadas em bolsa, representando um novo impulso ao progresso neste domínio, porém lento, gerado pelos anteriores incentivos que visaram estimular a ação voluntária por parte das próprias empresas e promover medidas de autorregulação.Um dos principais desafios consiste, ainda, na passagem de um maior equilíbrio numérico de gênero para uma igualdade substantiva nos conselhos de administração, aumentando ao mesmo tempo a representação das mulheres em cargos de poder e influência efetiva nos processos decisórios.