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Published in: Journal of Business Ethics 4/2017

07-03-2016

Can Sinful Firms Benefit from Advertising Their CSR Efforts? Adverse Effect of Advertising Sinful Firms’ CSR Engagements on Firm Performance

Authors: Hannah Oh, John Bae, Sang-Joon Kim

Published in: Journal of Business Ethics | Issue 4/2017

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Abstract

This study investigates corporate social responsibility (CSR) of sinful firms, which refer to ones that are operating in controversial industries, including the production and distribution of alcohol, tobacco, gambling, adult entertainment, firearm, military, and nuclear power. We attempt to answer two questions in this study: (1) Do these sinful firms actively advertise their CSR engagements compared to non-sinful firms? And (2) do their advertising efforts really yield increased financial performance? Positing that advertising not only can make sinful firms’ good deeds visible, but also can highlight the contradiction between these firms’ stigma and their prosocial activities, we claim that sinful firms are likely to advertise their CSR engagement to overcome their stigmatized firm image, but these advertising activities will make the firms’ performance vulnerable by inducing skepticism from stakeholders. Using KLD database in conjunction with COMPUSTAT and Center for Research in Security Prices from 1991 to 2010, where 337 firms are involved in the controversial sinful industries, namely tobacco, alcohol, gaming, firearms, military, and nuclear power, we examine the effect of advertising spending of sinful firms’ CSR engagement on performance vulnerability, which is instantiated with idiosyncratic risk. The empirical results indicate that sinful firms increase their advertising expenditure when they engage in CSR programs, but these efforts for advertising CSR tend to increase idiosyncratic risk. This finding indicates that even though sinful firms can benefit from engaging in socially responsible initiatives, advertising their CSR efforts may backfire.

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Appendix
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Footnotes
1
Idiosyncratic risk is a measure of volatility of stock prices and Carhart’s (1997) four-factor model is used to calculate this risk as the variance of the residuals from the factor model. Historical series of factor portfolios are obtained from Kenneth French’s website: http://​mba.​tuck.​dartmouth.​edu/​pages/​faculty/​ken.​french/​data_​library.​html.
 
2
Details about the construct of CSR dimensions of KLD data are provided in the “Appendix 1: Strengths and Concern Items in Seven Dimensions of KLD” section.
 
3
Advertising expenditure is data item 45 and total asset is data item 6 from COMPUSTAT annual database. The measure also reflects firms’ efforts for releasing press-related information.
 
4
This probability of being reported in KLD database is estimated from Probit regression model running binary dependent variable (=1 if reported in KLD or 0 otherwise) on firm’s sales, size, and leverage using all firms in the universe of COMPUSTAT database.
 
5
We also test the industry fixed effects to account for any possible differentiated effects of each sinful industry. We find qualitatively similar results to our main findings, which is the adverse effect of CSR-related advertising on performance vulnerability.
 
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Metadata
Title
Can Sinful Firms Benefit from Advertising Their CSR Efforts? Adverse Effect of Advertising Sinful Firms’ CSR Engagements on Firm Performance
Authors
Hannah Oh
John Bae
Sang-Joon Kim
Publication date
07-03-2016
Publisher
Springer Netherlands
Published in
Journal of Business Ethics / Issue 4/2017
Print ISSN: 0167-4544
Electronic ISSN: 1573-0697
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10551-016-3072-3

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