How do independent directors view corporate social responsibility (CSR)? Evidence from a quasi-natural experiment
© 2020 The Eastern Finance Association We investigate how independent directors view corporate social responsibility (CSR). Exploiting the passage of the Sarbanes-Oxley (SOX) Act and the associated exchange listing requirements as an exogenous regulatory shock, we document that independent directors...
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th-mahidol.578722020-08-25T16:44:25Z How do independent directors view corporate social responsibility (CSR)? Evidence from a quasi-natural experiment Pandej Chintrakarn Pornsit Jiraporn Shenghui Tong Napatsorn Jiraporn Richard Proctor Penn State Great Valley SUNY Oswego Mahidol University Siena College Economics, Econometrics and Finance © 2020 The Eastern Finance Association We investigate how independent directors view corporate social responsibility (CSR). Exploiting the passage of the Sarbanes-Oxley (SOX) Act and the associated exchange listing requirements as an exogenous regulatory shock, we document that independent directors view CSR activities unfavorably. In particular, firms forced to raise board independence reduce CSR engagement significantly relative to those not required to increase board independence. Our results are consistent with the risk-mitigation view and the agency cost hypothesis where managers over-invest in CSR to mitigate their own exposure to nonsystematic risk. The over-investments in CSR are curbed in the presence of a stronger, more independent, board of directors. Several robustness checks confirm the results, including fixed-effects and random-effects regressions, dynamic panel data analysis, instrumental-variable analysis, propensity score matching, Lewbel's heteroscedastic identification, and Oster's method for coefficient stability. We also confirm the risk-mitigation hypothesis by showing that CSR activities reduce firm risk significantly. Our research design is much less vulnerable to endogeneity and is therefore likely to show a causal effect of board independence on CSR. 2020-08-25T09:44:25Z 2020-08-25T09:44:25Z 2020-01-01 Article Financial Review. (2020) 10.1111/fire.12244 15406288 07328516 2-s2.0-85089072130 https://repository.li.mahidol.ac.th/handle/123456789/57872 Mahidol University SCOPUS https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?partnerID=HzOxMe3b&scp=85089072130&origin=inward |
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Economics, Econometrics and Finance Pandej Chintrakarn Pornsit Jiraporn Shenghui Tong Napatsorn Jiraporn Richard Proctor How do independent directors view corporate social responsibility (CSR)? Evidence from a quasi-natural experiment |
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© 2020 The Eastern Finance Association We investigate how independent directors view corporate social responsibility (CSR). Exploiting the passage of the Sarbanes-Oxley (SOX) Act and the associated exchange listing requirements as an exogenous regulatory shock, we document that independent directors view CSR activities unfavorably. In particular, firms forced to raise board independence reduce CSR engagement significantly relative to those not required to increase board independence. Our results are consistent with the risk-mitigation view and the agency cost hypothesis where managers over-invest in CSR to mitigate their own exposure to nonsystematic risk. The over-investments in CSR are curbed in the presence of a stronger, more independent, board of directors. Several robustness checks confirm the results, including fixed-effects and random-effects regressions, dynamic panel data analysis, instrumental-variable analysis, propensity score matching, Lewbel's heteroscedastic identification, and Oster's method for coefficient stability. We also confirm the risk-mitigation hypothesis by showing that CSR activities reduce firm risk significantly. Our research design is much less vulnerable to endogeneity and is therefore likely to show a causal effect of board independence on CSR. |
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Penn State Great Valley |
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Penn State Great Valley Pandej Chintrakarn Pornsit Jiraporn Shenghui Tong Napatsorn Jiraporn Richard Proctor |
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Article |
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Pandej Chintrakarn Pornsit Jiraporn Shenghui Tong Napatsorn Jiraporn Richard Proctor |
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Pandej Chintrakarn |
title |
How do independent directors view corporate social responsibility (CSR)? Evidence from a quasi-natural experiment |
title_short |
How do independent directors view corporate social responsibility (CSR)? Evidence from a quasi-natural experiment |
title_full |
How do independent directors view corporate social responsibility (CSR)? Evidence from a quasi-natural experiment |
title_fullStr |
How do independent directors view corporate social responsibility (CSR)? Evidence from a quasi-natural experiment |
title_full_unstemmed |
How do independent directors view corporate social responsibility (CSR)? Evidence from a quasi-natural experiment |
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how do independent directors view corporate social responsibility (csr)? evidence from a quasi-natural experiment |
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2020 |
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https://repository.li.mahidol.ac.th/handle/123456789/57872 |
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1763495167936954368 |