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Abstract
Based on a sample of 1,675 nonfinancial listed firms in Taiwan Stock
Exchange (TWSE) and Taipei Exchange (TPEx) over the period 2014 to 2023, this
study examines whether employee salary and benefits are associated with stock
price crash risk. With the growing emphasis on CSR and ESG, firm’s employee
salary and benefits, which represents key elements of the social and governance
dimensions, has increasingly been recognized as an important determinant of
firm stability and market valuation. Using multiple regression analyses and
alternative stock price crash risk measures, and incorporating the Taiwan High
Compensation 100 Index together with firm-level salary and benefits structure
variables, this study empirically investigates the relationship between salary
policies and downside risk. The results indicate that firms placing greater
emphasis on employee salary and benefits are less likely to experience extreme
negative stock returns, and this finding remains robust across alternative
model specifications and return benchmarks. The evidence suggests that
well-designed salary and benefits systems enhance employee productivity and
loyalty while strengthening corporate governance and information transparency,
thereby stabilizing investor confidence and reducing stock price crash risk.
JEL classification numbers: G14, J28.
Keywords: Employee
Salary and Benefits, Stock Price Crash Risk.