Abstract

PurposeThe purpose of this study is to examine the influence of characteristics of the institutional environment on the disclosure of corporate social responsibility (CSR).Design/methodology/approachThis is a quantitative and descriptive research. The dependent variables used were environmental dimension (ED) and social dimension (SD) that together compose the corporate social performance (CSP). The independent variables that will be used are the characteristics of the institutional environments of Brazil and the UK. Thus, for this end, variables of the national business system of both countries will be used: corruption transparency, access to credit by countries, quality of the education system and labor relations. After their collection, the data were submitted to descriptive and inferential statistics and hierarchical regression.FindingsData show that UK companies make more disclosure in CSR than Brazilian companies. Through linear regression, it can be seen that the institutional environment affects disclosure in CSR. In the UK, a country with better educational, labor, political and financial indicators than Brazil, it presented better CSR practices. The findings reveal that the better an institutional environment, the more firms act in CSR. The findings of the research confirm the premise of institutional theory: different institutional fields can modify business performance.Research limitations/implicationsThe study analyzed only the disclosure practices of companies in the public sector. Thus, the results should be carefully analyzed, without generalizations for all industry sectors. Therefore, it is suggested that future research looks at other industry sectors as well as other institutional contexts, i.e. other countries.Practical implicationsMultinational companies may have different CSR practices according to the institutional environment in which they operate. For example, companies in developed countries, such as the UK, have greater stakeholder pressure. Given this, managers must adapt their environmental strategies according to the institutional environment in which they operate.Originality/valueThis research contributes to CSR studies in various institutional contexts. There is a consensus in the literature that institutional environments affect firms' CSR practices. However, few empirical studies show results between the national business system and CSR. Thus, the present study intends to fill this research gap.

Highlights

  • While for the corporate social performance (CSP), the median values for the median indicate that the group of British companies had a higher score than the Brazilian companies, except for the year 2013, when the Brazilian companies had a median of 0.177, while British companies presented 0.172 for the median value

  • This research examined the influence of the institutional characteristics of an emerging responsibility country, Brazil, and a developed country, the UK, and how the institutional environment can interfere in the corporate social responsibility (CSR) practices

  • In in the utilities sector this way, one can conclude that a country in which its NBS is better, more rigid and regulated, its companies have more opportunities to act for the sustainable development of the planet

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Summary

Introduction

The relationship between consumers and companies has changed over the years, given several reasons, such as more conscious and demanding clients, institutional pressures, new Revista de Gest~ao Vol 28 No 3, 2021 pp. © Alan Bandeira Pinheiro, Jose Carlos Lazaro da Silva Filho and Marcia Zabdiele Moreira. The full terms of this licence may be seen at http:// creativecommons.org/licences/by/4.0/legalcode

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