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Doing good does not preclude doing well: corporate responsibility and financial performance

Jegoo Lee (Meehan School of Business, Stonehill College, Easton, Massachusetts, USA)
Samuel B. Graves (Carroll School of Management, Boston College, Chestnut Hill, Massachusetts, USA)
Sandra Waddock (Carroll School of Management, Boston College, Chestnut Hill, Massachusetts, USA)

Social Responsibility Journal

ISSN: 1747-1117

Article publication date: 20 September 2018

Issue publication date: 29 October 2018

842

Abstract

Purpose

This paper aims to propose and test a modified interpretation of long-standing issues on the corporate responsibility (CR)–corporate financial performance (CFP) relationship: companies involved in CR are in general no better and no worse in their level of financial performance than companies without such engagement because of the trade-off between benefit and cost at firm level and imbalance between supply and demand at industry (market) level.

Design/methodology/approach

The authors apply this frame to a data set with more than 12,000 observations over a 14-year period, using confidence intervals, as a useful and statistically valid approach for testing the null hypothesis.

Findings

The present study’s findings support neutrality between CR and CFP at the firm and industry levels, implying that a firm’s CR involvement neither penalizes nor improves its CFP.

Research limitations/implications

CR activities may provide windows of opportunity for companies but do not systematically improve financial performance.

Practical implications

“Doing good” is not a panacea for corporate achievement with respect to market-facing activities. For firms to succeed, instead, they need to create and implement their business cases and models by converting their involvement in CR activities into drivers for better outcomes because investments in CR practices do alone not guarantee improved financial performance.

Originality/value

The innovations in this study are twofold. Conceptually, this paper proposes a comprehensive approach for a neutral CR–CFP linkage. Empirically, it introduces a novel and appropriate method for testing neutrality. These will mark an important advance in the theoretical and empirical debates over CR and CFP.

Keywords

Citation

Lee, J., Graves, S.B. and Waddock, S. (2018), "Doing good does not preclude doing well: corporate responsibility and financial performance", Social Responsibility Journal, Vol. 14 No. 4, pp. 764-781. https://doi.org/10.1108/SRJ-03-2017-0044

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2018, Emerald Publishing Limited

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