Corporate Social Responsibility and Sustainable Finance: A Review of the Literature

Corporate Social Responsibility and Sustainable Finance: A Review of the Literature

Hao Liang, Luc Renneboog

Series number :

Serial Number: 
701/2020

Date posted :

September 29 2020

Last revised :

September 29 2020
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Keywords

  • Environmental • 
  • Social • 
  • and Governance • 
  • CSR • 
  • ESG • 
  • SRI • 
  • socially responsible investments • 
  • impact investing • 
  • Externalities • 
  • Stakeholders • 
  • stakeholder governance • 
  • climate change • 
  • Decarbonization • 
  • Global warming • 
  • Green bonds

Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) refers to the incorporation of Environmental, Social, and Governance (ESG) considerations into corporate management, financial decision making, and investors’ portfolio decisions.

Socially responsible firms are expected to internalize the externalities (for example, pollution) they create, and are willing to be accountable to shareholders as well as a broader group of stakeholders (employees, customers, suppliers, local communities,…). Over the past two decades, various rating agencies developed firm-level measures of ESG performance, which are widely used in the literature. A problem for past and a challenge for future research is that these ratings show inconsistencies, which depend on the rating agencies’ preferences, weights of the constituting factors, and rating methodology.

CSR also deals with sustainable, responsible, and impact investing (SRI). The return implications of investing in the stocks of socially responsible firms, the search for an ESG factor, as well as the performance of SRI funds are the dominant topics. SR funds apply negative screening (exclusion of ‘sin’ industries), positive screening, as well as activism through proxy voting or direct engagement. In this context, one wonders whether responsible investors are willing to trade off financial returns with a ‘moral’ dividend (the return given up in exchange for an increase in utility driven by the knowledge that one invests ethically). A recent literature concentrates on green financing (the financing of environmentally friendly investment projects by means of green bonds) and on how to foster economic de-carbonization as climate change affects financial markets and investor behavior.

Published in

Published in: 
Publication Title: 
This paper will appear in the Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Economics and Finance.

Authors

Dr.
Real name:
Research Member
Singapore Management University, Lee Kong Chian School of Business