Abstract

Sustainable behavior should necessarily benefit both the environment and society. However, we cannot take for granted that socially responsible firms are also environmentally responsible—e.g., a firm might benefit its stakeholders while degrading the environment—and the reverse applies too—e.g., an environmentally responsible firm might disrespect its employees. Consequently, our purpose is checking whether social responsibility and green investments—proxying for a firm’s environmental responsibility—are complements, substitutes, or unrelated choices. Using a representative sample of Italian manufacturing firms, our econometric estimates uncover the empirical relationship between social responsibility and green investments at firm level. We find evidence of complementarity, since socially responsible firms: (i) Are systematically more likely to make green investments; (ii) identify green investments as a voluntary choice promoting business competitiveness much more than other firms. Finding complementarity between social and environmental responsibility has important implications. Policies favoring the transition to sustainable development should adopt a systemic approach considering the positive spillovers of Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) on environmental responsibility. Our evidence also suggests that firms indeed tend to behave in ways consistent with the holistic approach of the 2030 UN Agenda for sustainable development. Additional research should study how governance affects the CSR–environmental responsibility nexus.

Highlights

  • A major innovation changed the landscape for sustainable development in 2015

  • We found that Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) positively affects the likelihood of investing in environmental sustainability (p < 0.01; Model 1)

  • The positive influence of CSR was confirmed in Model 2 when we introduced the variable regarding the relationship with the local community (Territory): The coefficient of CSR remains significant at the 1% level

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Summary

Introduction

A major innovation changed the landscape for sustainable development in 2015. The method of the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) was updated by the 17 Sustainable Development Goals of the 2030 UN Agenda enshrining a more holistic and measurable approach. Do firms have the right incentives to engage in the holistic approach? The spontaneous question is whether the two dimensions of environmental and social sustainability are friends or foes inside a firm. We have adopted the definition of Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) distinguished from Corporate Environmental Responsibility (CER), as proposed by World Business Council for Sustainable Development (WBCSD) [2,3]. CSR and CER overlap only partly, suggesting that it makes sense to study the relationship between social responsibility and environmental responsibility

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