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Climate change exposure and dividend policy: evidence from textual analysis

Viput Ongsakul (NIDA Business School, National Institute of Development Administration (NIDA) and The Securities and Exchange Commission of Thailand (SEC), Bangkok, Thailand)
Pandej Chintrakarn (Business Administration Division, Mahidol University International College (MUIC), Salaya, Thailand)
Suwongrat Papangkorn (Thammasat University, Bangkok, Thailand)
Pornsit Jiraporn (Penn State Great Valley School of Graduate Professional Studies, Pennsylvania State University, Malvern, Pennsylvania, USA)

International Journal of Accounting & Information Management

ISSN: 1834-7649

Article publication date: 31 January 2024

160

Abstract

Purpose

Taking advantage of distinctive text-based measures of climate policy uncertainty and firm-specific exposure to climate change, this study aims to examine the impact of firm-specific vulnerability on dividend policy.

Design/methodology/approach

To mitigate endogeneity, the authors apply an instrumental-variable analysis based on climate policy uncertainty as well as use additional analysis using propensity score matching and entropy balancing.

Findings

The authors show that an increase in climate policy uncertainty exacerbates firm-specific exposure considerably. Exploiting climate policy uncertainty to generate exogenous variation in firm-specific exposure, the authors demonstrate that companies more susceptible to climate change are significantly less likely to pay dividends and those that do pay dividends pay significantly smaller dividends. For instance, a rise in firm-specific exposure by one standard deviation weakens the propensity to pay dividends by 5.11%. Climate policy uncertainty originates at the national level, beyond the control of individual firms and is thus plausibly exogenous, making endogeneity less likely.

Originality/value

To the best of the authors’ knowledge, this study is the first attempt in the literature to investigate the effect of firm-specific exposure on dividend policy using a rigorous empirical framework that is less vulnerable to endogeneity and is more likely to show a causal influence, rather than a mere correlation.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

Data availability: The authors do not have permission to share data.

Funding: There is no funding.

Conflict of interest disclosure: The authors have no conflict of interest.

Ethics approval statement: This study does not involve human subjects or animals.

Patient consent statement: This study does not involve patients.

Permission to reproduce material from other sources: All the materials are authors’ own work.

Clinical trial registration: This study does not involve clinical trials.

Since submission of this article, the following author has updated their affiliation: Suwongrat Papangkorn is now with Sasin School of Management, Chulalongkorn University, Bangkok, Thailand.

Citation

Ongsakul, V., Chintrakarn, P., Papangkorn, S. and Jiraporn, P. (2024), "Climate change exposure and dividend policy: evidence from textual analysis", International Journal of Accounting & Information Management, Vol. ahead-of-print No. ahead-of-print. https://doi.org/10.1108/IJAIM-07-2023-0170

Publisher

:

Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2024, Emerald Publishing Limited

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