Abstract

This paper investigates the contributions of politically connected independent directors to shareholder value by examining stock price reactions to their mandatory resignations. Employing an event study, we find that, if a private firm loses its politically connected independent director due to mandatory resignation, its stock price drops 4.61% on average within ten trading days, compared with control firms. We observe that, compared with independent directors from academia, politically connected independent directors are absent from more board meetings and are reluctant to express dissenting opinions even if they attend meetings. So the negative stock price reaction cannot be mainly explained by the loss of supervisory functions after politically connected independent directors were forced to resign from positions. By employing DID estimation, we further find that the economic benefits obtained by private firms decrease after the mandatory resignation. The heterogeneity and robustness checks further confirm that private firms indeed were unable to get the same amount of economic benefits from the government as before, which provides a reasonable explanation for the negative stock price reaction after mandatory resignations of politically connected independent directors.

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