Kalogeraki, Olga and Georgakakis, Dimitrios (2022) Friend or Foe? CEO gender, political ideology, and gender-pay disparities in executive compensation. Long Range Planning, 55 (3). p. 102126.
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Abstract
Do female CEOs reduce gender-pay disparities in top management teams (TMTs)? Some scholars draw on social identity theory to argue that, as individuals tend to identify with and support their in-groups, appointing a female corporate leader (i.e., CEO) will mitigate the gender-pay gap among executives. Yet, others draw on the queen-bee syndrome to postulate that some female CEOs may rather strengthen gender-pay disparities in upper echelons – by favoring out-groups (male) more than their in-groups (female). We bring together these opposing theoretical arguments to develop a ‘beyond CEO gender’ perspective, arguing that the effects of CEO gender on TMT gender-pay disparities should be considered in conjunction with the corporate leaders' values – as reflected by their political ideology. Our research demonstrates that conservative-female CEOs compensate female (versus male) executives lower compared to all other CEO gender-ideology categories (i.e., female-liberal CEOs, male-liberal CEOs, and male-conservative CEOs). Overall, our work contributes to theory on the CEO-TMT interface by highlighting the role of the CEO as the ‘architect’ of executive remuneration.
Item Type: | Article |
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Status: | Published |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.lrp.2021.102126 |
School/Department: | York Business School |
URI: | https://ray.yorksj.ac.uk/id/eprint/10735 |
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