外国所有权的成本:一个新兴经济体的自愿可持续发展报告和财务表现

Ru-Shiun Liou, Pi-Hui Ting, Ying-Yu Chen
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引用次数: 1

摘要

目的:许多新兴经济体公司在外国所有者的压力下,接受解决企业社会责任(CSR)的挑战,并考虑采取可持续发展举措。然而,尚不清楚外资所有权如何发挥作用,使或阻碍这些新兴经济体公司将可持续发展举措转化为改善的财务绩效。利用新制度理论,作者认为,自愿报告可持续性的新兴经济体公司在股东眼中获得合法性,并改善股市表现。然而,新兴经济体企业可能没有资源来协调内部利益相关者的各种合法性要求,以促进可持续性实践,从而导致与会计绩效的负相关。由于国外市场不同的合法性要求,外国所有权削弱了可持续发展报告与公司绩效之间的关系。为了验证研究的假设,作者收集并分析了2010年至2016年间台湾上市公司的大量样本,其中外资所有权类型包括外国信托基金,外国金融机构和其他外国法人实体。进行回归分析,以调查报告其可持续实践的公司是否有更好的财务绩效,包括股票市场绩效和会计绩效。此外,采用三步程序来解决二元解释变量的内生性问题。股市对新兴经济体企业自愿提交可持续发展报告的积极反应支持了投资者对其合法性的认可。相比之下,由于难以协调新兴经济体中不同利益相关者之间不同的合法性要求,可持续发展报告与会计绩效呈负相关。此外,外资所有权,特别是信托基金,对可持续发展报告与可持续发展目标(sdg)的企业实践与公司股票市场表现之间的关系表现出负向调节作用。原创性/价值通过考察外国所有权在新兴经济体公司可持续发展报告中较少被检验的偶然作用,作者提供了不同类型的外国所有权对公司财务绩效的影响的见解,超越了先前关注新兴经济体家族所有权、国家所有权或管理所有权的研究。研究结果为新兴经济体的企业可持续发展战略和外国直接投资政策提供了启示。
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The cost of foreign ownership: Voluntary sustainability reporting and financial performance in an emerging economy
PurposeMany emerging economy firms are under foreign owners' pressure to embrace the challenges of addressing corporate social responsibility (CSR) and consider adopting sustainability initiatives. However, it is not clear how foreign ownership plays a role to enable or inhibit these emerging economy firms from translating sustainability initiatives into improved financial performance. Utilizing neo-institutional theory, the authors argue that emerging economy firms that voluntarily report sustainability gain legitimacy in the eyes of shareholders and improve stock market performance. However, emerging economy firms may not have the resources to reconcile the internal stakeholders' various legitimacy requirements to promote sustainability practices, resulting in a negative association with accounting performance. Foreign ownership attenuates the relationship between sustainability reporting and firm performance due to the different legitimacy requirements in foreign markets.Design/methodology/approachTo test the study’s hypotheses, the authors collected and analyzed a large sample of publicly listed firms between 2010 and 2016 in Taiwan where the types of foreign ownership include foreign trust funds, foreign financial institutions and other foreign legal entities. Regression analyses were conducted to investigate whether the firms that report their sustainable practices have better financial performance, including stock market performance and accounting performance. Additionally, a three-step procedure was employed to address the endogeneity issue with a binary explanatory variable.FindingsThe positive stock market reaction to the emerging economy firms' voluntary sustainability reporting supports legitimacy gained among investors. By contrast, sustainability reporting has a negative association with accounting performance due to the difficulty of reconciling different legitimacy requirements among various stakeholders in emerging economies. Further, foreign ownership, particularly the trust fund, exhibits a negative moderating effect on the relationship between sustainability reporting in aligning corporate practices with sustainable development goals (SDGs) and the company's stock market performance.Originality/valueBy examining the less tested contingent role played by foreign ownership in the emerging economy firms' sustainability reporting, the authors provide insights into the influence exerted by different types of foreign ownership on firms' financial performances beyond previous studies that focus on family ownership, state ownership, or managerial ownership in emerging economies. The findings shed light on corporate sustainability strategy and foreign direct investment policies for an emerging economy.
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