Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5109368 | Journal of Business Research | 2017 | 10 Pages |
Abstract
Over the past 40Â years, scholars have demonstrated the effects of corporate social performance (CSP) on corporate financial performance (CFP), finding mixed results on the main effect of CSP on CFP. This study moves beyond the search for a universal main effect of CSP on CFP to examine factors that drive some firms to experience greater returns from their CSP efforts. Building from the signaling and stakeholder theory definitions of reputation and the trajectory literature in psychology, this study examines the following question: what is the impact of a firm's CSP reputation on the relationship between CSP actions and CFP in the current period? Findings based on a sample of 351 US firms demonstrate that firms with either a history of growth in negative CSP, a propensity toward increasing negative CSP, or a more inconsistent history of positive or negative CSP, experience decreased returns from current period investments in CSP.
Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities
Business, Management and Accounting
Business and International Management
Authors
Jacob Brower, Saim Kashmiri, Vijay Mahajan,