Abstract
The present article deals with a new, modern business management paradigm founded on both the social and the environmental responsibility of firms intended as powerful instruments to match the issue of sustainability with corporate performance and value creation (thus evolving from the classical shareholder value to a new, more comprehensive, shared value view). The Directive 2013/34/EU required the disclosure of large enterprises and groups’ non-financial and diversity information. At the same time, a growing number of proactive companies that behave with real initiatives more compliant to the so-called Stakeholder Theory have become quite familiar to produce CSR and sustainability reports periodically to share with the community their relevant responsibility actions and achievements (3 P results or triple-bottom-line performance, as a for-profit, people, planet). Such a complex, behavioral, and informative approach follows the corporate governance setting and management strategy within the ethical domain (business ethics). In this perspective, we conduct a systematic research study on the economic literature that showed a focus on the possible relation between the responsible behavior/information and the economic/financial performance of firms, analyzing both the empirical findings and theoretical works significantly investigating the effect of sustainability indicators on financial and market results. According to the general studies, socially responsible policies can produce a positive impact on company performance by many advantages such as the reduction of operating costs and financial risks, an increase of efficiency and competitiveness, the improvement of the company’s reputation, and a related increase in consumer confidence; despite preceding studies pointed out that CSR investments and responsibility policies (representing the result of an agency conflict between managers and shareholders) would generate just an increase in costs and a consequent decline in the performance of companies. The consideration of the ESG (environmental, social, and governance) – which completes the CSR issue – and its new goals in the long run, even as a component of the holistic enterprise risk management system, finally enables us to reinterpret the fundamental competitive advantage of firms in a sustainability key. In particular, the environmental, social, and governance extra-performance over the industry may show to be more ‘value-relevant’ than the absolute ESG ratings itself. In conclusion, the social, environmental, and governance responsibilities (to all stakeholders) are building a set of dynamic capabilities and actions which reveal a new competitive (X) Factor of the modern corporation. Keywords: CSR, Environmental-Social-Governance, Economic Performance, Value Creation; Stakeholder Theory, Sustainability Disclosure.
Highlights
The theories that see the satisfaction of the needs of all stakeholders as a necessary condition for sustainable value creation and, more in general, the theme of Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR), have assumed great importance in economic and business studies and professional practice (Abbott & Monsen, 1979; Freeman, 1994; Donaldson and Preston, 1995; Clarkson, 1995; Carroll, 1999; Crane et al, 2017)
Several authors argue that social and environmental responsibility can be a significant benefit to competitive enterprise (Hart, 1995)
Some empirical research demonstrated that social and responsible behaviors have a positive effect on company performance (Waddock and Graves, 1997; Van Beurden and Gossling, 2008; Kim and Kim, 2014; Kim et al, 2018), generating important advantages for companies, including the reduction of operating costs and financial risks, the improvement of efficiency and competitiveness and the growth of company’s reputation and consumer confidence (Barney, 1991; Porter 1991; Hammond and Slocum, 1996; Porter and Kramer, 2006; Bird et al, 2007; Weber, 2008; Dahlsrud, 2008; Flammer, 2015)
Summary
The theories that see the satisfaction of the needs of all stakeholders as a necessary condition for sustainable value creation and, more in general, the theme of Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR), have. With specific reference to the most recent ESG perspective (Environmental-SocialGovernance), the London Stock Exchange Group (and Borsa Italiana S.p.A.) in 2017 have issued an interesting guide featuring some recommendations on voluntary and non-financial information to be integrated into the listed company disclosure This new strategic-management approach adoption has determined some important impacts on the financial reporting, with the introduction of the “Integrated Reporting” that includes financial performance and the social, environmental and economic context in a single document, within which the company operates. Recent research on the specific theme of ESG (Taliento et al, 2019) provides further analysis of the operative, socio-environmental and governance “dimensions” to prove the possible influence of sustainability performance indicators on the company's financial performance It can be included in the CSR/performance studies considering the Stakeholders Theory framework and is consistent with the Shared Value Theory.
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