新冠肺炎与企业社会责任披露:来自新西兰的证据

Stephen Bahadar, R. Zaman
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引用次数: 4

摘要

利益相关者对公司价值的不确定性驱动了他们获取信息的冲动,以及管理层披露的选择。在这项研究中,作者考察了一个重要的不确定性来源——最近的COVID-19大流行对企业社会责任(CSR)披露的影响——是否以及如何超出了管理层和利益相关者的控制。设计/方法/方法作者通过对125家新西兰证券交易所(NZX)在2020年2月28日至2020年12月31日上市的新闻稿采用计算机辅助文本分析(CATA),开发了一种新的每日企业社会责任披露结构。为了捕捉COVID-19的强度,作者使用了新西兰特定日期经人口调整的确诊病例累计总数的增长率。为了检验COVID-19爆发与企业社会责任披露之间的关系,作者在企业层面采用聚类标准误差的普通最小二乘(OLS)回归。研究结果作者发现,COVID-19爆发的一个标准差增加导致此类披露增加28%。这些结果在一系列敏感性测试中仍然是稳健的,并且在考虑到潜在的内生性问题后继续保持不变。在渠道分析中,研究表明,在结构良好的董事会(即一个更大、更独立、女性比例更高的董事会)存在的情况下,COVID-19与企业社会责任披露之间的积极关系更为明显。在进一步的分析中,作者发现,记录的关系在大流行的生命周期中有所不同,并受到政府严格反应、同行企业社会责任压力和媒体报道的调节。原创性/价值本文是对研究COVID-19爆发对企业社会责任披露影响的文献的第一项研究。之前的研究要么考察企业社会责任-股票回报在COVID-19市场危机中的关系,要么考察企业特征(包括财务信息质量)与COVID-19期间股票回报的反应之间的关系。作者通过提供经验证据来扩展此类研究,证明管理者通过增加企业社会责任披露来应对COVID-19。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
COVID-19 and CSR disclosure: evidence from New Zealand
PurposeStakeholders' uncertainty about firms' value drives their urge to get information, as well as managerial disclosure choices. In this study, the authors examine whether and how an important source of uncertainty – the recent COVID-19 pandemic's effect on corporate social responsibility (CSR) disclosure – is beyond managerial and stakeholders' control.Design/methodology/approachThe authors develop a novel construct for daily CSR disclosure by employing computer-aided text analysis (CATA) on the press releases issued by 125 New Zealand Stock Exchange (NZX) listed from 28 February 2020 to 31 December 2020. To capture COVID-19 intensity, the authors use the growth rate of the population-adjusted cumulative sum of confirmed cases in New Zealand on a specific day. To examine the association between the COVID-19 outbreak and companies' CSR disclosure, the authors employed ordinary least squares (OLS) regression by clustering standard error at the firm level.FindingsThe authors find a one standard deviation increase in the COVID-19 outbreak leads to a 28% increase in such disclosures. These results remained robust to a series of sensitivity tests and continue to hold after accounting for potential endogeneity concerns. In the channel analysis, the study demonstrates that the positive relationship between COVID-19 and CSR disclosure is more pronounced in the presence of a well-structured board (i.e. a large, more independent board and with a higher proportion of women on it). In further analysis, the authors find the documented relationship varies over the pandemic's life cycle and is moderated by government stringency response, peer CSR pressure and media coverage.Originality/valueThis paper is the first study that contributes to the scant literature examining the impact of the COVID-19 outbreak on CSR disclosure. Prior research either investigates the relationship of the CSR-stock return during the COVID-19 market crisis or examines the relationship between corporate characteristics including the quality of financial information and the reactions of stock returns during COVID-19. The authors extend such studies by providing empirical evidence that managers respond to COVID-19 by increasing CSR disclosure.
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