Abstract
AbstractBased on a large panel of listed firms from 52 countries in the period 2002–2020, we investigate the relationship between corporate social responsibility (CSR) and equity risk. We confirm previous evidence that higher CSR scores are related to lower risk measures, considering all types of risks: total, systematic, and idiosyncratic. Analyzing a large international sample allows us to investigate the role of country and company characteristics in the relationship between CSR scores and risk measures. The risk-reducing effect is more pronounced in weaker institutional environments. It is stronger in civil-law countries, in countries with low security regulation or disclosure requirement levels and where financial information is less widespread. Firms in high impact or high profile industries benefit more from CSR than firms in other industries as do firms that are not cross-listed. The financial crisis has increased the risk-reducing effect of CSR. The main results are confirmed in the COVID-19 period.
Funder
Vienna University of Economics and Business
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
Finance,General Business, Management and Accounting,Accounting
Cited by
10 articles.
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