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Dr. John Li
Assistant Professor
DepartmentAccounting
Education MAcc, MMath, PhD
Phone416-979-5000 ext. 544588
Overview
Dr. John Li is an Assistant Professor of Accounting at the Ted Rogers School of Management. His teaching interests are in personal and corporate taxation. His research interests include: corporate tax avoidance, the influence of income taxes on managerial decisions, and executive compensation. He obtained a Bachelor of Mathematics, a Master of Accounting, and a Master of Mathematics (Statistics) from the University of Waterloo. John recieved his Accounting PhD from the University of Oregon.
Corporate Taxation (teaching and research), Individual Taxation (teaching), Executive Compensation (research).
| Select research and professional contributions |
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| 鈥淒o Managers Respond to Tax Avoidance Incentives by Investing in the Tax Function? Evidence from Tax Departments鈥 (Solo-authored dissertation 鈥 Dissertation committee: David Guenther, Linda Krull, Kyle Peterson, Van Kolpin). |
| 鈥淧ay for Propitiation: Are CEOs Paid for Employee Satisfaction?鈥 (Co-authored study with Khaled Abdulsalam, Dane Christensen, Scott Graffin, and Kyle Peterson) |
| 鈥淭he Effect of Net Operating Loss Carryforwards on Corporate Investment Behavior鈥 (Co-authored study with Kimberly Krieg and Linda Krull) |
| 鈥淭he Role of Employee Satisfaction in Determining Corporate Tax Planning Outcomes: Evidence from Glassdoor Ratings鈥 (Solo-authored study) |