Cuhk Researchers Find Csr Offers A Competitive Edge To
ANG SAN MEI. HONG KONG. Corporate social responsibility (CSR) has become an increasingly popular business activity over the years. More and more companies are actively finding ways to give back to the society - some are engaged in environmental projects while others set out to help disadvantaged children in poverty. The very nature of helping others resonates in our human nature - it makes us feel good to do well. However, in the corporate world, perhaps there is more to feeling good by doing good. As researchers in the Chinese University of Hong Kong (CUHK) Business School find, CSR can be a strategy which helps to create a competitive edge for firms and make their peers in the industry want to follow suit.
"No firms operate in isolation. If CSR creates a competitive edge, its advantage should be mostly manifested through a firm's competition with other firms," says Prof. Jie Cao, Associate Professor in the Department of Finance at CUHK Business School.
The study titled "Peer Effects of Corporate Social Responsibility" was written by Prof. Cao and his former PhD student Xintong Zhan who joined Erasmus University Rotterdam as Assistant Professor in Finance in August, alongside their collaborator Prof. Hao Liang from Singapore Management University.
The result is again positive with evidence showing that peer firms indeed match their CSR strategies with their competitors. Further analysis has been done on a few sub- dimensions of the most important aspects of CSR, including environment, employee relationship, and workforce diversity. The scores all support the researchers' hypothesis that CSR is seen as an important strategy and will induce peer firms to follow specifically. When a firm adopts a CSR proposal focusing on specific dimensions such as environment, employment and workforce related issues, its peer firms significantly increase their CSR practice by upgrading their engagement in the same specific dimensions to stay competitive in the game.
Jie Cao, Hao Liang and Xintong Zhan, " Peer Effects of Corporate Social Responsibility ", July 12, 2016. 28th Australasian Finance and Banking Conference Paper.