Bank deregulation and corporate social responsibility
Bank deregulation and corporate social responsibility
We show how external credit market development can affect corporate social responsibility. Using a sample of US public firms over the period 1991–2010, we find that bank deregulation negatively affects CSR performance. We argue that deregulation-induced banking competition enhances credit accessibility, thereby reducing firms’ incentives to pursue CSR as a means of securing stakeholder rewards. Empirical evidence shows that firms increase their use of debt financing in response to the intensified banking competition, and these firms experience a more pronounced decline in CSR performance. We alleviate the potential concern that the observed decline in CSR could be attributed to changes in bank monitoring following deregulation. Further analyses find that firms reduce CSR regardless of their material nature, suggesting that the primary driver of CSR could be the trade-off between costs and returns. Overall, our findings shed light on the strategic motives of CSR, which exhibits adaptability in response to business dynamism.
Banking competition, CSR, Financial constraints
Liu, Hong
e8808574-7eb8-459e-9539-110a1f76e117
Wu, Qiang
1bcd5f87-13b9-4122-abfa-728bb58bd3ce
Zhou, Yue
1f8cb3b9-0e34-4dd9-862c-e1c7e238d4c7
5 August 2024
Liu, Hong
e8808574-7eb8-459e-9539-110a1f76e117
Wu, Qiang
1bcd5f87-13b9-4122-abfa-728bb58bd3ce
Zhou, Yue
1f8cb3b9-0e34-4dd9-862c-e1c7e238d4c7
Liu, Hong, Wu, Qiang and Zhou, Yue
(2024)
Bank deregulation and corporate social responsibility.
Journal of Financial Stability, 74, [101313].
(doi:10.1016/j.jfs.2024.101313).
Abstract
We show how external credit market development can affect corporate social responsibility. Using a sample of US public firms over the period 1991–2010, we find that bank deregulation negatively affects CSR performance. We argue that deregulation-induced banking competition enhances credit accessibility, thereby reducing firms’ incentives to pursue CSR as a means of securing stakeholder rewards. Empirical evidence shows that firms increase their use of debt financing in response to the intensified banking competition, and these firms experience a more pronounced decline in CSR performance. We alleviate the potential concern that the observed decline in CSR could be attributed to changes in bank monitoring following deregulation. Further analyses find that firms reduce CSR regardless of their material nature, suggesting that the primary driver of CSR could be the trade-off between costs and returns. Overall, our findings shed light on the strategic motives of CSR, which exhibits adaptability in response to business dynamism.
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Accepted/In Press date: 24 July 2024
e-pub ahead of print date: 27 July 2024
Published date: 5 August 2024
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Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 The Authors
Keywords:
Banking competition, CSR, Financial constraints
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Local EPrints ID: 493182
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/493182
ISSN: 1572-3089
PURE UUID: cdaa5f23-b9aa-416c-9e07-2dcd766b6510
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Date deposited: 27 Aug 2024 16:48
Last modified: 28 Aug 2024 02:01
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Author:
Hong Liu
Author:
Qiang Wu
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