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Essays on Resource Adjustment : 자원조정에 관한 연구

DC Field Value Language
dc.contributor.advisor이우종-
dc.contributor.author조미옥-
dc.date.accessioned2022-04-05T05:53:14Z-
dc.date.available2022-04-05T05:53:14Z-
dc.date.issued2021-
dc.identifier.other000000168168-
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/10371/177710-
dc.identifier.urihttps://dcollection.snu.ac.kr/common/orgView/000000168168ko_KR
dc.description학위논문(박사) -- 서울대학교대학원 : 경영대학 경영학과, 2021.8. 조미옥.-
dc.description.abstractThis dissertation is comprised of two essays on labor resource adjustment. The first essay, entitled An Empirical Analysis of Gender Differences in Asymmetric Labor Adjustment, discusses the gender difference in asymmetric labor adjustment and its association with female underrepresentation at the executive level (a.k.a., the glass ceiling). Based on detailed gender-specific employment disclosures of Korean listed firms, I document a set of novel findings. First, I report the significant presence of labor cost stickiness in general, consistent with prior studies. Decomposing labor costs, I further show that it is mainly attributable to asymmetric adjustment of employment rather than that of wages. More importantly, the asymmetric labor adjustment is more salient for males than it is for females, suggesting that managers tend to dismiss females to a greater extent than males during sales downturns than they recruit during sales upturns. Additional analyses present several cross-sectional variations in differential labor adjustment across gender. Second, gender differences in asymmetric labor adjustment widen the tenure gap across gender, contributing to the glass ceiling.
The second essay, entitled Media Attention and Audit Labor Mix, investigates whether and how auditors respond to client firm media attention in their audit risk assessments. Using novel data on audit fees, audit hours, and audit hours by rank, this study finds that auditors charge higher audit fees to client firms that have greater media attention (e.g., media coverage, negative publicity) to reduce audit risk, consistent with the medias disciplining role. In addition, audit fee increases do not occur via increasing audit risk premiums (e.g., audit fees per hour), but by increasing audit effort (e.g., audit hours) in general, and by increasing the audit hours of partner and senior CPAs rather than junior CPAs in particular. In additional analyses, I find that Big 4 auditors show a stronger association between media attention and greater input from experienced CPAs and that auditors are more likely to resign from clients with greater media attention. Overall, the findings indicate that auditors view media as an information source in audit risk assessment, affecting audit labor mix and thus audit production costs.
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dc.description.tableofcontentsEssay 1. An Empirical Analysis of Gender Differences in Asymmetric Labor Adjustment 1
1. Introduction 2
2. Literature Review and Hypothesis Development 9
2.1. Gender Gap in Corporate Employment 9
2.2. Asymmetric Labor Adjustment across Gender 11
3. Data and Research Design 14
3.1. Sample 14
3.2. Empirical Model 15
3.2.1. Cost Stickiness Model 15
3.2.2. Stacking Regressions 16
4. Empirical Results 18
4.1. Summary Statistics 18
4.2. Differential Labor Adjustment across Gender 18
5. Additional Analyses 22
5.1. Cross-sectional Analyses 22
5.2. Robustness Checks 25
6. Discussion: Gender Differential in Labor Adjustment, Gender Tenure Gap, and Glass Ceiling 26
7. Conclusion 30
References 32
Appendix A. Large Sample Evidence on Gender Gaps in Corporate Employment 51
Appendix B. Disclosure Example of Employment Information in Annual Report 53
Appendix C. Variable Definitions 54
Essay 2. Media Attention and Audit Labor Mix 56
1. Introduction 57
2. Literature Review and Hypothesis Development 65
2.1. Media Attention, Audit Fees, and Audit Effort 65
2.2. Media Attention and Audit Effort of Audit Labor Mix 68
3. Data and Research Design 72
3.1. Institutional Background 72
3.2. Media Attention 74
3.3. Data and Sample Selection 76
3.4. Empirical Model 76
4. Empirical Results 78
4.1. Descriptive Statistics 78
4.2. Media Attention, Audit Fees, and Audit Effort 80
4.3. Media Attention and Audit Labor Mix 82
5. Additional Analyses 83
5.1. Relative Measures of Audit Labor Mix 83
5.2. Quality Reviewers and Auditor-Engaged Specialists 85
5.3. Big 4 Membership 86
5.4. Auditor Resignation Decisions 89
5.5. Robustness Tests 90
6. Conclusion 91
References 93
Appendix A. Auditees Disclosure Example of Audit Fees and Audit Labor Mix 119
Appendix B. Variable Definitions 120
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dc.format.extentvi, 124-
dc.language.isoeng-
dc.publisher서울대학교 대학원-
dc.subjectlabor adjustment-
dc.subjectgender difference-
dc.subjectglass ceiling-
dc.subjectmedia attention-
dc.subjectaudit hours-
dc.subjectauditor labor mix-
dc.subjectaudit staff proficiency-
dc.subject고용조정-
dc.subject성별차이-
dc.subject유리천장-
dc.subject언론보도집중-
dc.subject감사시간-
dc.subject직급별 감사시간 투입-
dc.subject감사 숙련도-
dc.subject.ddc658-
dc.titleEssays on Resource Adjustment-
dc.title.alternative자원조정에 관한 연구-
dc.typeThesis-
dc.typeDissertation-
dc.contributor.AlternativeAuthorCho, Meeok-
dc.contributor.department경영대학 경영학과-
dc.description.degree박사-
dc.date.awarded2021-08-
dc.identifier.uciI804:11032-000000168168-
dc.identifier.holdings000000000046▲000000000053▲000000168168▲-
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