Abstract

This study examines the impact of firms' targeted poverty alleviation activities on corporate value and how corporate internal governance regulates this relationship. This study uses Fixed Effects and System GMM estimations to test hypotheses by analyzing data from Chinese non-financial listed firms from 2016 to 2021. The results demonstrate that corporate targeted poverty alleviation and internal corporate governance control affect company value and governance. Corporate value increases as a result of effective internal governance. Internal governance control enhances the positive relationship between the firm's targeted poverty reduction and value creation. This study's findings are robust to alternative measures of poverty alleviation initiatives. Furthermore, heterogeneity analysis reveals that non-SOE firms, small and low-leverage firms engaging in anti-poverty activities are in a better position to achieve value creation. This study adds to the literature on poverty reduction, sustainable corporate value creation, and corporate internal governance control. Study results may help policymakers and managers in evaluating their business strategies by focusing more on fulfilling social responsibilities to eradicate poverty from the region by improving governance policies to generate sustainable value for the firm.

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