John Gallemore

Assistant Professor of Accounting and Charles E. Merrill Faculty Scholar at Booth School of Business

Associate Professor of Accounting at Kenan-Flagler Business School

Schools

  • Kenan-Flagler Business School
  • Booth School of Business

Links

Biography

Booth School of Business

John D. Gallemore studies financial institutions, financial reporting, corporate taxation, and regulation and regulators. His papers have been accepted for publication in the Journal of Accounting & Economics and Contemporary Accounting Research. He has presented at several accounting and banking conferences, including the UNC Tax Symposium and the FDIC Bank Research Conference.

Prior to his return to academia, Gallemore worked as a consultant for Navigant Consulting. During his time there, he worked on projects involving banks that failed during the savings and loan crisis of the 1980s. These projects provided Gallemore an appreciation for the interactions between accounting information, bank choices, and regulation, which has influenced his research and teaching.

Gallemore earned his Ph.D. in accounting from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. During his time in the Ph.D. program, Gallemore was awarded one of the ten 2012 Deloitte Foundation Doctoral Fellowship Awards, and was the American Accounting Association''s representative at the 2013 European Accounting Association Doctoral Colloquium in Paris, France. Additionally, he holds a Master''s in Business Administration (where he finished first in his class), a B.S. in Business Administration, and a B.A. in Political Science, all from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.

Outside of research and teaching, Gallemore enjoys playing and watching sports, reading, traveling, and spending time with his wife and daughters.

Publications

Banks as Tax Planning Intermediaries, with Brandon Gipper and Ed Maydew, Journal of Accounting Research 57 (2019), 169-209.

The Effect of Corporate Taxation on Bank Transparency: Evidence from Loan Loss Provisions, with Kathleen Andries and Martin Jacob, Journal of Accounting and Economics 63 (2017), 307–328.

The Importance of the Internal Information Environment for Tax Avoidance, with Eva Labro, Journal of Accounting and Economics 60 (2015), 149–167.

The Reputational Costs of Tax Avoidance, with Ed Maydew and Jake Thornock, Contemporary Accounting Research 31 (2014), 1103–1133.

Kenan-Flagler Business School

John Gallemore studies how firms’ economic and financial reporting behavior are shaped by corporate tax policy and enforcement.

His research has been published in top accounting journals, such as the Journal of Accounting & Economics, Journal of Accounting Research and Contemporary Accounting Research. His research and expertise have been featured by media outlets such as The Washington Post, Chicago Tribune and Bloomberg.

Dr. Gallemore teaches Strategic Cost Analysis and Performance Evaluation in the full-time MBA program.

A triple Tar Heel, he joins the faculty from the University of Chicago, where he won the Emory Williams Award for Teaching Excellence, the school-wide teaching award decided by students across all MBA programs. He was named one of Poets & Quants “Best 40 Under 40” business school professors.

As a PhD student at UNC Kenan-Flagler, he won several awards, including the Outstanding Doctoral Student Award and Deloitte Foundation Doctoral Fellowship Award. He was an American Accounting Association/Deloitte Doctoral Consortium Fellow and a FASB Doctoral Consortium Fellow.

He earned his PhD in accounting, his MBA in finance and his BSBA from UNC Kenan-Flagler.

Research interests:

  • Corporate taxation, financial reporting, financial institutions

Publications

  • “Bank Financial Reporting Opacity and Regulatory Intervention”. Review of Accounting Studies, forthcoming
  • “Corporate Tax Enforcement Externalities and the Banking Sector” with Martin Jacob. Journal of Accounting Research 58 (2020), 1117–1159.
  • “Banks as Tax Planning Intermediaries” with Brandon Gipper and Ed Maydew. Journal of Accounting Research 57 (2019), 169–209.
  • “The Effect of Corporate Taxation on Bank Transparency: Evidence from Loan Loss Provisions” with Kathleen Andries and Martin Jacob. Journal of Accounting and Economics 63 (2017), 307–328.
  • “The Importance of the Internal Information Environment for Tax Avoidance” with Eva Labro. Journal of Accounting and Economics 60 (2015), 149–167.
  • “The Reputational Costs of Tax Avoidance” with Ed Maydew and Jake Thornock Contemporary Accounting Research 31 (2014), 1103–1133.

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