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 Axel Hilling . Photo

Axel Hilling

Director of third cycle studies, Associate Professor

 Axel Hilling . Photo

Tax Scandals and Investor Reactions

Author

  • Amanda Sonnerfeldt
  • Axel Hilling
  • Niklas Sandell
  • Anders Wilhelmsson

Summary, in English

The aim of this paper is to examine how various types of investors react, and how ownership structures of firms involved in unethical tax practices change once these unethical behaviours are made public. It combines news data with market data to identify investor reactions to tax scandals. Using a staggered diff-in-diff approach, we find that different ownership classes such as hedge funds, banks, individuals, and governments do not significantly change their ownership positions after a tax scandal. Further, we only find economically small and statistically insignificant reactions in cost of equity, trading volume, and equity volatility. Taken together, these findings challenge the effectiveness of market discipline through transparency and accountability, and highlight the need for alternative policy interventions to address unethical tax practices. From a broader perspective, these results suggest that transparency alone may not be sufficient to drive meaningful changes in a company’s behavior. However, transparency may still play a crucial role in strengthening governance mechanisms and driving the shift toward more responsible companies. Therefore, we stress the need for a comprehensive, longer-term research agenda to explore how transparency, combined with evolving stakeholder attitudes toward taxes, can promote meaningful changes in tax governance and practices by companies over time.

Department/s

  • Accounting and Corporate Finance
  • Lund Tax Academy
  • Department of Business Law
  • Department of Economics

Publishing year

2025-04-17

Language

English

Document type

Preprint

Publisher

SSRN

Topic

  • Business Administration
  • Economics

Status

Published

Research group

  • Lund Tax Academy