Factors influencing the multinational banks’ decisions to curtail operations in russia: Does ESG matter?

Author:

Rohov Heorhiy1ORCID,Kolodiziev Oleh2ORCID,Yehorycheva Svitlana3ORCID,Krupka Ihor4ORCID,Zaplatynskyi Markiian5ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Doctor of Economics, Professor, Head of the Department of Finance, Admiral Makarov National University of Shipbuilding, Ukraine

2. Doctor of Economics, Professor, Professor of the Department of Customs and Financial Services, Simon Kuznets Kharkiv National University of Economics, Ukraine

3. Doctor of Economics, Professor, Professor of the Department of Finance, Banking and Taxation, National University “Yuri Kondratyuk Poltava Polytechnic”, Ukraine

4. Doctor of Economics, Professor, Professor of the Department of Analytical and International Economics, Ivan Franko National University of Lviv, Ukraine

5. PhD in Economics, Associate Professor, Associate Professor of the Department of Social and Humanitarian Sciences, Ukrainian Academy of Printing, Ukraine

Abstract

The paper is devoted to an under-researched topic of the international business community’s reaction to russia’s armed aggression against Ukraine. It aims to evaluate how G7 and EU financial sanctions, institutional pressure, ESG ratings, and asset value of multinational banks in russia influence their decisions to reduce activities in the invading country. The study used the Yale CELI database of companies leaving and staying in Russia for the classification tree method. The results show that none of the banks headquartered in G7 and EU member states that had no or relatively little assets in russia before the invasion are doing business there on a pre-war scale. Unlike banks headquartered in other countries, most either curtailed their presence in that market or exited the market. This indicates that financial sanctions imposed by G7 and EU member states and institutional pressure on banks in these countries to withdraw from the russian market have proven effective to a certain extent. However, these factors do not meaningfully influence the business of multinational banks with significant assets in russia. The study has not confirmed the hypothesis that a bank with higher ESG ratings is more likely to curtail its operations in the market of an aggressor country and withdraw. However, nearly all banks that scaled back significant activities or even pulled out of russia have better ESG indicators than the industry average. The results suggest the feasibility of improving the methodologies of ESG rating providers for accurately measuring business reactions to aggression and war crimes.

Publisher

LLC CPC Business Perspectives

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