State Ownership and Corporate Social Responsibility: An Investigation on Nigerian Data

Cyriacus Elochukwu Okafor
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 Methodology: This paper differs markedly from the methodologies of previous studies which used composite CSR indices. It deconstructs CSR expenditure into five categories – public goods, socially desirable goods, corporate philanthropy, employee relations and environmental conservation – and estimates the effects of government, foreign and institutional ownership on CSR variables controlling for such factors as firm size, return on assets and capital intensity. Using new data on listed Nigerian firms, this paper carries out its empirical investigation with panel data estimation in order to deal with heterogeneity and endogeneity issues.
 Findings: The findings of this paper indicate that different ownership structures have varying implications for the five forms of CSR investigated in this study. It reveals that government ownership has no significant effect on CSR expenditure on public goods, corporate philanthropy and environmental conservation. However, it finds that government ownership also significantly influences CSR expenditure on socially desirable goods and employee relations.
 Unique contribution to theory, practice and policy:Theoretically, this paper extends the trajectory of CSR discourse to include an elaborate investigation of the impact of ownership structures on CSR practices in all the major sectors of Nigerian economy.The paper argues that its empirical results have several policy implications for good corporate governance practices in Nigeria and other emerging economies. This paper suggests the need to institute incentives schemes and regulatory constraints that would compel government, foreign and institutional ownership to align their incentives with some forms of CSR practices.","PeriodicalId":479724,"journal":{"name":"Journal of business and strategic management","volume":"250 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2023-10-12","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Journal of business and strategic management","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.47941/jbsm.1471","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
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Abstract

Purpose: The paper examines the central issue underpinning the growing international literature and arguments that different ownership types have varying implications for a firm’s CSR engagement. It compliments evolving studies by looking at the effect of state ownership and other types of ownership structures on CSR, specifically in the Nigerian industry. It is argued that the impact of ownership structure on corporate decisions to allocate resources to Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) has assumed renewed significance in the burgeoning literature of developing economies, given the exigency for corporate executives to allocate firm specific resources to other social objectives that may detract from profit maximization. Methodology: This paper differs markedly from the methodologies of previous studies which used composite CSR indices. It deconstructs CSR expenditure into five categories – public goods, socially desirable goods, corporate philanthropy, employee relations and environmental conservation – and estimates the effects of government, foreign and institutional ownership on CSR variables controlling for such factors as firm size, return on assets and capital intensity. Using new data on listed Nigerian firms, this paper carries out its empirical investigation with panel data estimation in order to deal with heterogeneity and endogeneity issues. Findings: The findings of this paper indicate that different ownership structures have varying implications for the five forms of CSR investigated in this study. It reveals that government ownership has no significant effect on CSR expenditure on public goods, corporate philanthropy and environmental conservation. However, it finds that government ownership also significantly influences CSR expenditure on socially desirable goods and employee relations. Unique contribution to theory, practice and policy:Theoretically, this paper extends the trajectory of CSR discourse to include an elaborate investigation of the impact of ownership structures on CSR practices in all the major sectors of Nigerian economy.The paper argues that its empirical results have several policy implications for good corporate governance practices in Nigeria and other emerging economies. This paper suggests the need to institute incentives schemes and regulatory constraints that would compel government, foreign and institutional ownership to align their incentives with some forms of CSR practices.
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国有制与企业社会责任:对尼日利亚数据的调查
目的:本文考察了支撑越来越多的国际文献和论点的核心问题,即不同的所有权类型对公司的企业社会责任参与有不同的影响。它通过观察国家所有权和其他类型的所有权结构对企业社会责任的影响,特别是在尼日利亚工业中,对不断发展的研究进行了补充。本文认为,考虑到公司高管迫切需要将公司特定资源分配给其他可能减值利润最大化的社会目标,所有权结构对公司决策将资源分配给企业社会责任(CSR)的影响在发展中经济体的新兴文献中具有新的意义。 方法:本文明显不同于以往的研究方法,使用复合企业社会责任指数。它将企业社会责任支出分解为五类——公共产品、社会期望产品、企业慈善事业、员工关系和环境保护——并估计政府、外国和机构所有权对企业社会责任变量的影响,这些变量控制了公司规模、资产回报率和资本强度等因素。本文利用尼日利亚上市公司的新数据,采用面板数据估计进行实证研究,以处理异质性和内生性问题。 研究发现:本文的研究结果表明,不同的股权结构对本文研究的五种企业社会责任形式有不同的影响。结果表明,政府所有制对公共产品支出、企业慈善支出和环境保护支出没有显著影响。然而,研究发现,政府所有权也显著影响社会期望商品和员工关系上的企业社会责任支出。 对理论、实践和政策的独特贡献:从理论上讲,本文扩展了企业社会责任话语的轨迹,包括对尼日利亚经济所有主要部门的所有权结构对企业社会责任实践的影响的详细调查。本文认为,其实证结果对尼日利亚和其他新兴经济体的良好公司治理实践具有若干政策意义。本文建议有必要建立激励机制和监管约束,迫使政府、外国和机构所有者将其激励与某些形式的企业社会责任实践相结合。
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