Women Involved in the Financial Reporting Process and Financial Reporting Quality
We examine how the presence of women involved in the financial reporting process of public companies, and especially the interactions between them (i.e. the simultaneous presence of a woman CFO, women sitting on the audit committee, and women auditors), impacts financial reporting quality. For our sample of large French companies, we find that women do not affect financial reporting quality when interactions are not considered. However, the interactions between women involved in the financial reporting are associated with lower discretionary accruals and higher C-scores (our measure of conservatism), as expected because women are generally more risk averse and have greater ethical sensitivi…