The impact of generalist CEOs on workplace safety

A publication titled “The impact of generalist CEOs on workplace safety” on Journal of Behavioral and Experimental Finance by Sasha Molchanov, Harvey Nguyen and co-authors in June 2025

Abstract

Businesses are expected to operate as responsible corporate entities, with employee safety serving as a cornerstone of this responsibility. Executives, as corporate leaders, bear moral and ethical obligations to ensure the well-being of their workforce. Drawing on human capital and upper echelons theories, we examine the influence of executives’ transferable skills on workplace safety outcomes. We find that chief executive officers (CEOs) with general managerial human capital significantly contribute to the creation of safer work environments. The relation is more pronounced in firms facing financing constraints or intense market competition. These CEOs improve safety outcomes by making more prudent labor investment decisions, reducing employee workloads, and maintaining high information quality. Overall, our study underscores the pivotal role of CEOs’ general managerial human capital in promoting employee well-being and mitigating the potential adverse consequences of occupational hazards on firm performance.