科研管理 ›› 2019, Vol. 40 ›› Issue (2): 154-163.

• 论文 • 上一篇    下一篇

CEO学术经历与企业创新

张晓亮1,杨海龙1,2,唐小飞3   

  1. 1中国人民大学商学院,北京100872;
    2宿州学院商学院,安徽 宿州234000;
    3西南财经大学工商管理学院,四川 成都611130
  • 收稿日期:2018-05-12 修回日期:2018-12-05 出版日期:2019-02-20 发布日期:2019-02-20
  • 通讯作者: 杨海龙
  • 基金资助:
    国家自然科学基金面上资助项目:“品牌关系驱动力作用下的品牌资产产出模型研究”(项目编号:71372209,起止时间:2014.01-2017.12);国家自然科学基金资助重点项目:“网络环境下的新型定价模式研究”(项目编号:71331004,起止时间:2014.01-2018.12);中央高校基本科研业务费创新团队项目(项目编号:JBK1805005,起止时间:2018-2022);安徽省高校人文社会科学研究重大项目:“移动互联网环境下安徽特殊性产业集群品牌的广告诉求、真实性构建与价值重塑”(项目编号:SK2018ZD040,起止时间:2018.01-2020.12)。

CEO’s academic experience and firm innovation

Zhang Xiaoliang 1, Yang Hailong 1,2, Tang Xiaofei3   

  1. 1. Business School, Renmin University of China, Beijing 100872, China;
    2. Business School, Suzhou University, Suzhou 234000, Anhui, China;
    3. School of Business Administration, Southwestern University of Finance and Economics, Chengdu 611130, Sichuan, China
  • Received:2018-05-12 Revised:2018-12-05 Online:2019-02-20 Published:2019-02-20

摘要: 我国改革开放以来的“下海潮”在公司高管团队中形成了学者型CEO的独特现象。本文从这一现实背景出发,基于高层梯队理论实证检验了CEO学术经历对企业创新的影响及其作用机理。研究发现,CEO学术经历能够提高企业创新约10%,该结论在控制内生性及其他稳健性检验之后仍然成立。进一步地,当CEO权力越大或来自内部晋升等CEO对创新决策的影响力越大时,其学术经历对企业创新的促进效应越强。作用机理的检验表明,当CEO从海外取得学术经历或具备高层次学术经历时,其所在企业的创新水平更高;同时,有学术经历CEO所在企业更有可能通过产学研结合的技术创新战略提升企业创新水平,从而为本文的“创新精神塑造假说”提供了较为充分的证据支持。本文在丰富企业创新和高层梯队理论领域文献的同时,对于上市公司制定科学合理的CEO聘任决策及推动企业创新具有重要的启示意义。

关键词: 学术经历, 企业创新, 创新精神

Abstract: In the great wave of China’s reform and opening-up, a large number of college faculty and researchers in scientific research institutions left their in-system occupations and devoted themselves to the commercial tide, a phenomenon well known as “wenren xiahai” (Dickson,2007; Zhou et al., 2017). It is a unique phenomenon in the development of China’s economic reform that has rarely occurred in western countries such as the United States and the United Kingdom. It should be noted that in recent years, increasing amount of researchers with academic experience have entered the management of listed firms and even held top level positions like Chief executive officer. According to statistics in our sample, CEOs with academic experience account for 13.5% on average during the sample period, and the percentage shows a steady growth trend year by year, from 9.1% in 2007 to 13.6% in 2010, then up to around 15% since 2011. As the number of scholar-type CEOs is growing rapidly in top management teams, what roles do they play in the firms’ innovation decision-making? Does CEO’s academic experience hinder or enhance innovation? What is the mechanism? These questions remain unexplored in the previous literature.Theoretically, the effect of CEO’s academic experience on firm innovation is uncertain. On one hand, CEO’s academic experience may impede firm innovation. Due to prolonged academic training, CEOs with academic experience tend to be more rigorous and risk-averse in their decision-making, and are relatively more focused on independent thinking (Jiang and Murphy, 2007). As innovative activities involve a high probability of failure and the innovation process is unpredictable and idiosyncratic with many contingencies that are impossible to foresee, the listed firms headed by CEOs with academic experience may have lower innovation outputs. On the other hand, the essence of academic research is exploration and innovation (Beveridge, 2017). Long-term academic edification may endow academic CEOs with inherent creative spirit and innovative willingness, thus enhance firm innovation. Therefore, the relationship between CEO’s academic experience and firm innovation is an empirical question to be tested.Based on statistics on Shanghai Exchange and Shenzhen Exchange listed firms in China between 2007 and 2014,this paper examines the effect of CEO’s academic experience on firm innovation and discusses the underlying mechanisms. Using a firm fixed-effect regression model, we document a positive relation between CEO’s academic experience and innovation output (measured by invention patents in two years ahead). More specifically, we find that CEO’s academic experience increases firm innovation by about 10%. Although evidence stated above supports our hypothesis, an important concern is that the relation between CEO’s academic experience and firm innovation could be endogenously determined. To establish causality, we employ two identification tests, including Heckman two-stage regressions and propensity score matching (PSM) approach to address endogeneity concerns. Besides, we conduct several robustness tests and our results hold. Moreover, we find that the positive association between CEO’s academic experience and firm innovation is more pronounced when the CEO is more powerful or promoted within the firm. We further investigate the underlying mechanisms and find that firms with overseas or high-level academic experience CEOs are more innovative; meanwhile firms with academic experience CEOs are more likely to implement industry-university-research cooperation strategy to promote firm innovation. Overall, the evidence is consistent with our “creative spirit shaping hypothesis”. In addition, we find that the promotion effect of CEO’s academic experience on firm innovation mainly comes from natural science research experience, while political connection weakens the positive association between CEO’s academic experience and firm innovation.This paper contributes to the existing literature in several ways. First, we contribute to the stream of research that examines the motivations and determinants of firm innovation. The large proportion of CEOs with academic experience in top management teams is an important and unique phenomenon which originates from “wenren xiahai” wave during China’s reform and opening-up. To the best of our knowledge, this paper is the first in the literature to provide causal evidence that CEO’s academic experience affects firm innovation. We provide supportive evidence that CEO’s academic experience enhances firm innovation and shed light on the creative spirit shaping function of academic experience. Second, our study extends prior research that examines the effect of managerial attributes on firm decision-making. Prior literature focus primarily on the links between managerial heterogeneity, including managers’ age, gender, education background, personality characteristics, financial experience, industry expertise experience, poverty experience, military experience, politics experience and firm behaviors. But less is known about the economic consequences of CEO’s academic experience. Unlike previous studies, we provide new evidence on how CEO’s academic experience affects listed firms’ high-risk innovation activities and explore the underlying mechanisms in the context of scholar-type CEOs phenomenon in top management teams. This study not only contributes to literature on firm innovation and Upper Echelons Theory, but also has significant implications for listed firms to make better CEO appointment decisions to enhance firm innovation. Prior studies pointed out that innovation activities involve the exploration of new untested approaches that are likely to fail, so standard pay-for-performance schemes that punish failures with low rewards and termination may in fact have adverse effects on innovation (Ederer and Manso, 2013). This study goes further and shows that the CEO’s inherent creative spirit and innovative willingness are more efficient in the process of innovation decision-making. Therefore, it is more important for listed firms to explore and cultivate the CEO’s inherent creative spirit and innovative willingness than depending on inefficient external incentives, so as to improve listed firms’ innovation outputs and core competitiveness.

Key words: academic experience, firm innovation, creative spirit