Abstract

Purpose: Owing to the voluntary nature of CSR activities, the decision to participate or not could be affected by the motives of corporate directors. The purpose of this research was to investigate whether family involvement in business moderates the relationship between board independence and sustainability performance of firms. Design/methodology/approach: Firstly, propensity score matching is employed to control for the problem of potential endogeneity in the sample by generating a matched sample. Later, regression analysis is conducted on this matched sample to check for the moderating impact of family-led firms on the relation between board independence and CSR performance (CSRP) of firms. Findings/results: We document about Chinese firms with independent boards exhibiting socially responsible behaviour which shows that they serve in a monitoring capacity over the management on behalf of rest of the stakeholders. Moreover, our results show that the role of independent directors is compromised in establishing effective monitoring in family-led firms. Practical implications: Our results would help regulating agencies in designing regulatory programs by guiding them in developing customized policies for different governance and ownership systems in place. Our findings recommend that in a bid to attain improved sustainability performance, diversified shareholding may be favoured or requisite codes may be framed to enhance the social performance of firms having concentrated ownership. Originality/value: This work essentially clears the varying results in literature with regard to the relationship of board characteristics and firms’ CSRP.

Highlights

  • Today, family businesses dominate the economic landscape of the world (Meglio, 2019)

  • The current study aims to address the issue by establishing an argument that the relationship of board independence and CSR performance (CSRP) works differently for family and non-family firms

  • Our results reflect the tendency of independent directors towards an increased involvement in corporate social responsibility (CSR) activities, which is in line with the findings of Kao, Yeh, Wang and Fung (2018) reported for Chinese-listed companies

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Summary

Introduction

Family businesses dominate the economic landscape of the world (Meglio, 2019). The diverse results based on the views of agency and SEW perspectives can be understood in the light of contingency theory, which suggests that the relationship between two variables can vary with context or culture (Mokhtar, Jusoh, & Zulkifli, 2016) In this background, Bing and Li (2019) showed that indulging in CSR activities may adversely affect the financial performance (FP) of firms, which explains that family businesses would opt for CSR engagement only in http://www.sajbm.org case it adds to firms’ reputation and welfare (Zellweger, Nason, Nordqvist, & Brush, 2013). Given the structure of ownership, the nature of agency problem in China is very different from the Western world, which is intensified by the weak market control mechanism Such a situation turns into a special case for independent directors, where they are expected to safeguard the rights of minority shareholders of family-led firms. Industry (IND) and time (YEAR) dummy variables are used to control for fixed effects

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