Abstract

Social responsibility fulfillment helps modern enterprises achieve sustainable development. Based on empirical data on China's A-share listed companies in 2013–2016, this paper examines the impact of corporate social responsibility performance on a company's financing costs from the perspective of targeted poverty alleviation. Specifically, we find that enterprises’ engagement in poverty alleviation social responsibility helps to reduce the cost of equity capital. The result is robust to using alternative indicators of the cost of equity capital, propensity score matching method, change model and sample removed financial sector. Furthermore, we find that the negative relationship between enterprises’ engagement in poverty relief and the cost of equity capital is mainly concentrated in private enterprises and in the central and eastern regions of China. Moreover, the negative relationship mainly exists after China’s listed companies were forced to disclose information on poverty alleviation. This paper also finds that institutional investors' shareholding plays a partial mediating role in this reduction effect and that enterprises’ poverty alleviation efforts help companies improve their financial performance and firm value. This study enriches the relevant literature on corporate social responsibility and the cost of equity capital and has reference value for corporate sustainable development. It also provides a theoretical basis for corporate poverty alleviation work in developing countries and the economic results of CSR.

Highlights

  • Corporate sustainability is closely related to corporate social responsibility (CSR) [1,2]

  • By discussing the relationship between corporate targeted poverty alleviation participation and the cost of equity capital, this study confirms that corporate poverty alleviation work captures the attention of stakeholders and may alleviate corporate financing pressure

  • This study empirically tests the relationship between targeted poverty alleviation participation and the cost of equity capital of Chinese listed firms while considering the mediating effect of institutional investors’ shareholding

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Summary

Introduction

Corporate sustainability is closely related to corporate social responsibility (CSR) [1,2]. For capital market investors, this study examines whether the effort of listed companies’ targeted poverty alleviation is a signal that increases the value of enterprises or a kind of agency cost that increases risk expectations and, in turn, affects the cost of equity capital? This study is the first empirical test of the economic consequences of enterprises’ targeted poverty alleviation and provides positive empirical evidence from the capital market for China’s ongoing poverty alleviation and a reference for CSR in developing countries. The previous literature mainly focused on the field of environmental responsibility [3,4]; by contrast, this paper is based on the background of China’s poverty alleviation in recent years, further complementing the study of the economic consequences of CSR and research on the cost of equity. The last section concludes the paper and offers suggestions and directions for future research

Literature review and theoretical background
Materials and methods
Discussion and conclusion
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