Abstract

Academic research has shed light on the empirical relationships among a firm’s corporate social responsibility (CSR), corporate social irresponsibility (CSiR) and firm performance and on the firm’s customer satisfaction–firm performance relationship in different markets. However, little notice has been taken of whether the coexistence of corporate social responsibility, corporate social irresponsibility and customer satisfaction has an interactive effect on firm performance. This study aims to examine the effects of their interaction on firm performance from an investment perspective. Using unbalanced panel regression to test a sample of publicly traded firms from the United States, this study finds that, in general, firms with higher customer satisfaction earn positive changes in abnormal stock returns. For firms that engage in CSR, CSR positively affects corporate performance, whereas firms’ social irresponsibility activities reduce firms’ financial performance. All else equal, a positive interactive effect of CSiR and customer satisfaction on stock return was observed. The results reveal that high customer satisfaction can alleviate the negative effect of corporate social irresponsibility on firms’ financial performance. Our findings will help management executives and investors to understand that the negative effect of a firm’s unforeseen events on firm performance can be weakened by increasing customer satisfaction.

Highlights

  • Prior studies have examined the influences of corporate social responsibility on important outcomes in the financial markets

  • This paper investigates the relationship between corporate social responsibility (CSR), corporate social irresponsibility (CSiR), customer satisfaction and their interaction and stock returns

  • This study examines the relationship between change in CSR, change in CSiR and their interactive effect on strong American Consumer Satisfaction Index (ACSI) firms and stock return on a yearly basis

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Summary

Introduction

Prior studies have examined the influences of corporate social responsibility (hereafter, CSR) on important outcomes in the financial markets. Recent studies have examined various elements of this relationship. Chen, Dong and Lin [1], Nguyen, Kecskés and Mansi [2] and Oikonomou, Yin and Zhan [3] investigate the relevance of CSR to investors’ investment decisions; Jin, Cheng and Zeng [4] investigate the stock market’s impact on firms’ corporate socially irresponsible (hereafter, CSiR) events. Research regarding the impact of CSR, CSiR, customer satisfaction and their interaction on firm performance for a firm is relatively few. This paper investigates the relationship between CSR, CSiR, customer satisfaction and their interaction and stock returns

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