2017
DOI: 10.2139/ssrn.3054236
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Corporate Social Responsibility and Capital Allocation Efficiency

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Cited by 41 publications
(66 citation statements)
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References 63 publications
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“…Therefore, we perform an instrumental variable estimation procedure consisting of two‐stage least square regressions to alleviate the endogeneity concerns driven by such potentially, if unobservable, omitted variables and selection bias. We follow Attig et al (), Bhandari and Javakhadze (), and Benlemlih and Bitar () and use the initial level of a firm's CSR score ( CSR ) as our instrumental variable. In the first stage, we regress CSRP ( CSRA ) on instrument CSR and control variables from Models and .…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Therefore, we perform an instrumental variable estimation procedure consisting of two‐stage least square regressions to alleviate the endogeneity concerns driven by such potentially, if unobservable, omitted variables and selection bias. We follow Attig et al (), Bhandari and Javakhadze (), and Benlemlih and Bitar () and use the initial level of a firm's CSR score ( CSR ) as our instrumental variable. In the first stage, we regress CSRP ( CSRA ) on instrument CSR and control variables from Models and .…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Numerous studies have examined the real effects of CSR performance. For example, CSR has been observed to be conducive in reducing the cost of capital and insider trading (El Ghoul, Guedhami, Kwok, & Mishra, ; Gao, Lisic, & Zhang, ; Ge & Liu, ; Goss & Roberts, ), increasing credit ratings and optimal levels of risk taking (Attig, El Ghoul, Guedhami, & Suh, ; Drago, Carnevale, & Gallo, ; Harjoto & Laksmana, ) and affecting investment efficiency and tax aggressiveness (Benlemlih & Bitar, ; Bhandari & Javakhadze, ; Davis, Guenther, Krull, & Williams, ; Hoi, Wu, & Zhang, ; Lanis & Richardson, ). However, only a few studies have explored the role of CSR from the perspective of reporting quality.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In terms of some of the most recent studies, Jain et al () provide empirical evidence that short sellers target firms with lower ESG scores, on the understanding that higher firm performance is commonly associated with lower values of the composite ESG scores. Finally, Bhandari and Javakhadze (), using an unbalanced panel of U.S. firms covering the period 1992–2014, provide empirical evidence that firms' CSR policies reduce accounting and stock‐based performance. Moreover, their empirical evidence indicates that CSR practices impact on firms' allocation efficiencies, which, in turn, reflect negatively on firms' future performance levels.…”
Section: A Brief Review Of the Related Literaturementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Based on this intuitive and well‐constructed proposition, several studies have sought to address and review empirical dimensions of the “doing well by doing good” hypothesis. Mixed results have emerged from recent studies including among others Dowell, Hart, & Yeung, ; Margolis & Walsh, ; Shen & Chang, ; Gillan, Hartzell, Koch, & Starks, ; Mǎnescu, ; Ameer & Othman, ; Dimson, Karakas, & Li, ; Wu & Shen, ; Di Giuli & Kostovetsky, ; Fatemi, Fooladi, & Tehranian, ; Jain, Jain, & Rezaee, ; and Bhandari & Javakhadze, . These studies investigate the effect of corporate decisions regarding the adoption of CSR, and often ESG policies in particular, to some dimension of firm performance.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In contrast, the overinvestment perspective regards social responsibility as a corporate excessive investment behavior that will increase the risk of the enterprise and damage its value. For example, Bhandari and Javakhadze [41] find that CSR investment consumes resources needed for projects that can increase corporate value, thus reducing the efficiency of corporate investment, increasing the agency cost of the company, and ultimately damaging shareholder value. Hemingway and Maclagan [14] hold the view that personal factors of management may influence decision-making related to social responsibility.…”
Section: The Economic Consequences Of Csrmentioning
confidence: 99%