Corporate Cash Holdings and National Culture: Evidence from the Middle East and North Africa Region
Date
08/10/2021
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Type
Article
Publisher
MDPI
Series Info
Journal of Risk and Financial Management;Volume: 14 Issue: 10
Scientific Journal Rankings
Abstract
This paper investigates to what extent cultural dimensions, based on Hofstede’s model,
can clarify differences in cash holding levels. The sample includes 395 banks across 19 countries
in the Middle East and North Africa region over a period of 16 years (1999–2014). The findings
indicate that when uncertainty avoidance and masculinity decrease, cash holdings increase, whereas
when power distance, long-term orientation, and individualism increase, the cash holdings increase
correspondingly. Based on robustness analysis, the results remain unaffected even after controlling
corporate and macroeconomic characteristics related to inflation, corruption, and the exchange
rate system. Further analysis shows insignificant differences between Islamic and non-Islamic
banks regarding the influence of culture over cash holdings. This study contributes to the literature
regarding the impact of culture on corporate cash holdings based on a unique and different context,
through examining this relationship in financial institutions located in the Middle East and North
Africa region.
Description
Keywords
cash holdings, culture, Middle East and North Africa region
Citation
El-Halaby, Sherif, Hosam Abdelrasheed, and Khaled Hussainey. 2021. Corporate Cash Holdings and National Culture: Evidence from the Middle East and North Africa Region. Journal of Risk and Financial Management 14: 475. https:// doi.org/10.3390/jrfm14100475