Are Red or Blue Companies More Likely to Go Green? Politics and Corporate Social Responsibility
60 Pages Posted: 17 Mar 2011 Last revised: 19 Aug 2013
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Are Red or Blue Companies More Likely to Go Green? Politics and Corporate Social Responsibility
Are Red or Blue Companies More Likely to Go Green? Politics and Corporate Social Responsibility
Date Written: August 20, 2012
Abstract
We examine whether the political leanings of a firm’s stakeholders affect its behavior in terms of corporate social responsibility (CSR). Using firm-level CSR ratings from Kinder, Lydenberg, Domini (KLD), we find that firms score higher on CSR when they have Democratic rather than Republican founders, CEOs, and directors, and when they are headquartered in Democratic rather than Republican-leaning states. We estimate that CSR costs Democratic-leaning firms approximately $20 million more in annual SG&A expenses than Republican-leaning firms ($80 million more within the sample of S&P500 firms), representing about 10% of net income. We also show that changes in firm CSR policies (KLD “strengths”) are negatively associated with future stock returns, changes in institutional ownership, and changes in ROA, suggesting some loss of firm financial value in exchange for any direct value benefits to stakeholders from social responsibility.
Keywords: Corporate social responsibility (CSR), Corporate culture, Political values
JEL Classification: M14, G3, L2, L21, D21
Suggested Citation: Suggested Citation
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