Corporate Governance, Corporate Social Responsibility and Corporate Reputation
Corporate Governance, Corporate Social Responsibility and Corporate Reputation
Corporate Governance, Corporate Social Responsibility and Corporate Reputation
Sun Wen, The Research Center of Corporate Governance Nankai University, Tianjin,China Yang Changzhi The Research Center of Multinational Corporations Nankai University, Tianjin,China Abstract: Corporate social responsibility (CSR), corporate governance (CG) and corporate reputation(CR) influence the development of firms mostly. In this paper, a model of dynamic relations among CSR, corporate governance and corporate reputation was constructed in the theoretical framework of stakeholder. The model reflects that corporate reputation is formed in the dynamic relations between firms and corporate stakeholders, and corporate reputation is the synthesized result of corporate governance and CSR. For the purpose of testing the fitness of the model in China, an empirical study is conducted on the relationship between corporate governance, CSR and corporate reputation. The result shows that good CSR has positive effect on firm reputation. It is also indicated that CG and CR doesnt have significant relationship, but coefficient of the inter-variable CG*CSRis significant and positive, which reflects that good corporate governance alone couldnt bring good reputation, but it could when it comes with good social responsibility. Keywords: Corporate Governance, Corporate Social Responsibility, Firm Reputation, Stakeholder
1
1.Introduction
At the very beginning of this century, a series of corporate frauds happened in developed country which makes the corporate governance become the focus of these countries. The fraud brought positive effect to the corporate performance and stakeholders interest, and even made some firms go bankrupt. Under such background, many experts thought about the tradition questions about firms again: what is the goal of a firm, who is the firm responsible for, which social responsibility should a firm take. After rethinking of those questions, many experts focus on the effect of and relationship between corporate social responsibility and corporate governance. Corporate governance and corporate social responsibility are often mentioned with firm frauds. Especially now, with the modern media, any frauds could have negative and even fatal effect on fame
This paper was supported by the Key project of National Natural Science Foundation of China (code:70532001)
1
and performance of the firm. Certainly, if a firm does well in the corporate governance and firm social responsibility, it will get good reputation (Lev, Baruch,2006). Good reputation could bring value added ( Asyraf Wajdi DusukiHumayon Dar2006); eventually the firm could benefit its performance and have sustainable development. With competition between firms turning strong in China, corporate reputation is to be a main channel for firms to get competition advantage. At the same time, more and more attention are paid to corporate governance and corporate social responsibility, but it is not clear on the relationship of Corporate governance, corporate social responsibility and firm reputation. This article firstly analyses how the corporate governance and corporate social responsibility affects the firm reputation, secondly describes the relationship with the Chinese data, and thirdly gives results some implications for the Chinese firms.
was widely accepted. According to the Stakeholder theory, although shareholders are the most important stakeholder and the profit is the core objective of a firm, when a firm try to meet them it must think of interest of other stakeholders. It is required that corporate managers understand their stakeholder environments and manage more effectively within the nexus of relationships that exists for their companies. The whole point of stakeholder theory, in fact, lies in what happens when corporations and stakeholders act out their relationships (freeman, 2004). (2) Corporate social responsibility and corporate governance There are a variety of definitions of CSR and no overall agreement. Generally speaking, CSR is concerned with treating the stakeholders of the firm ethically or in a responsible manner. Ethically or responsible means treating stakeholders in a manner deemed acceptable in civilized societies. Social includes economic responsibility. Stakeholders exist both within a firm and outside. The natural environment is a stakeholder. The wider aim of social responsibility is to create higher and higher standards of living, while preserving the profitability of the corporation, for peoples both within and outside the corporation (Hopkins, 2004). However, from the perspective of stakeholder, corporate social responsibility posits on the issues what should the firm do for the stakeholders, in other words, CSR means what to do for the stakeholders. As to corporate governance, the OECD provides the most authoritative functional definition of corporate governance: "Corporate governance is the system by which business corporations are directed and controlled. The corporate governance structure specifies the distribution of rights and responsibilities among different participants in the corporation, such as the board, managers, shareholders and other stakeholders, and spells out the rules and procedures for making decisions on corporate affairs. By doing this, it also provides the structure through which the company objectives are set, and the means of attaining those objectives and monitoring performance." The significance of corporate governance for the stability and equity of society is captured in the broader definition of the concept offered by Sir Adrian Cadbury (2002): "Corporate governance is concerned with holding the balance between economic and social goals and between individual and communal goals. The governance framework is there to encourage the efficient use of resources and equally to require accountability for the stewardship of those resources. The aim is to align as nearly as possible the interests of individuals, corporations and society."2 According to the analysis above, we know that the main goal of corporate governance is to design and arrange suitable institution to built good relationship between firms and stakeholders. We also conclude that there is difference between corporate governance and corporate social responsibility, corporate social responsibility pays much attention to what to do for the stakeholders, corporate governance pay attention to how to do. So firms must deal well with both of them to benefit stakeholders (see figure 1).
Corporate governance
CSR
Figure 1 The relationship between corporate governance and corporate social responsibility
3.The effects of corporate governance and corporate social responsibility on firm reputation
Corporate reputation is a major and growing concern globally, and it is increasingly being managed from a strategic perspective, because both managers and academicians think the good firm reputation will bring more interest to firms. Fombrun1990indicates that high reserves of reputational capital give an organization distinct advantages: firsttheir products and stock offerings entice more customers and investors and command higher prices. Second, their jobs lure more applicants and generate more loyalty and productivity from their employees. Third, their clout with suppliers is greater and they pay lower prices for purchases and have more stable revenues. Finally, their risks of crisis are fewer and when crises do occur, they survive with less financial lossFombrun, C. and Shanley1990. Meanwhile, Fombruns (1996) definition of corporate reputation has been more widely used than most. Fombrun defined corporate reputation as a perceptual representation of a companys past actions and future prospects that describes the firms overall appeal to all of its key stakeholders when compared with other leading rivals. (1) The source of firm reputation Firm reputation originates from recognition and comment of stakeholders, and stakeholders often judge a firm by its behavior on the product and capital market. These markets are the mail place for firms to produce and manage, and information transfer between firms and stakeholders also happen in the markets. From the performance of firms in the two markets and relationship with firms, stakeholders have their own opinions which would eventually turn to firm reputation.
Corporate reputation
firms
Figure 2 The two sources of firm reputation In the same way, there are effects of firm reputation to firm performance in the production and capital market. Greenley and Foxall (1997) use a broader approach recognizing firm performance in relation to various stakeholders. They find that companies that do not take account of the interests of their stakeholders , with low reputation, exhibit poor performance. Roger C, Vergin and M.W, Qoronfleh(1998) takes a study on the 400 firms with good reputation. He found not only consumers pay more attention to the production of those firms, but also creditors favor those firms. By further study he concludes that firm reputation has positive effect on the firms stock price. In the capital market, investors prefer to buy the stock of firms with good reputation. And good corporate governance is a token of good reputation. A survey from Mckinsey shows that investor will pay premium for the stock of firms with good corporate governance, which was regarded as having high corporate reputation by investors.Since corporate governance is involved in most of corporate stakeholders especially investors in capital market, so corporate reputation was directly influenced by corporate governance According to statistics from China stock market the stock accounts is beyond 100 millions until may 2007. Because of lack of special investment knowledge, they usually make the investment choice by judging from corporate reputation, and corporate governance is the standards to choose firms of good reputation. In product market, it is difficult to distinguish good product from bad one because of the increasing complexity of product. Customers prefer to buy products from firms of good reputation, which comes from corporate social responsibility. In other words, CSR is the typical character of corporate reputation. In recent years, society's expectations for CSR have grown with the improvement of consciousness of CSR in many countries. Many companies have been working to improve their corporate reputation by expanding their CSR efforts, investing in staff, protecting environment, disclosing more information and integrating CSR into corporate strategy, which benefit corporate reputation. According to some survey, the firms which publish annual social responsibility reports easily get high evaluation from stakeholders. 2The dynamic model among CSR, corporate governance and corporate reputation
From the above analysis of the effects of corporate governance and CSR on corporate reputation, a dynamic model which illustrates the relations among CSR, corporate governance and corporate reputation is constructed (figure 3) In this model, corporate reputation is shaped from the dynamic relations between stakeholders and firms in product market and capital market, which decides that Corporate governance and corporate social responsibility is the main source to build corporate reputation.
Product market stakeholders customers suppliers communit y goverment
CSR
Corporate reputation
Corporate performance
invstors
Corporate governance
Capital market
Figure 3 The dynamic model of relations between CSR, corporate governance and corporate reputation
Note: CR --corporate reputation; CGcorporate governance; CSRcorporate social responsibility; FSfirm size (2) Sample, variables and data It is hard to measure firm reputation, which is the dependent variable in the empirical model . The
value of a key corporate brand and the primary intangible asset for many companies are often used to represent the firm reputation (Khermouch et al., 2001).In this paper we get the data of real estate for firm reputation from a famed institution in China. Corporate governance (CG) and corporate social responsibility(CSR) are two independent variables. As to the variable of CG, we adopt the value of China Corporate Governance Index(CCGI), which was developed by Nankai Corporate Governance Research Center. There are no direct variable to measure corporate social responsibility (CSR), however, SRI(social responsibility index) is often used to measure CSR in the foreign empirical study. So we construct a China corporate social responsibility index (CCSRI3) to represent the variable of CSR, which reflects the degree of corporate social responsibility. According to former literature, we adopt firm size (FS) as control variable. As to the sample, first we get 100 strongest real estate firms in china which was chosen by Development Research Center of the State Council of China. And then we delete the firm we couldnt get detailed data, at last we get 48 firms, the crude data is gathered from the website and annals of those firms. 3The empirical result Table 1 The empirical result Variables CG CSR CG* CSR Constant (FS) R-squared Observations 23.5 (0.65) 4.65 (2.38) ** 0.90 (1.87) * -112.27 (0.075) 0.31 (0.49) 0.25 48 163.48 (1.19) 0.22 (0.04) 0.17 48 0.23 48 0.19 48 Coeff. and T-stats 42.9 (1.07) 0.99 (2.73) ** 16.51 (0. 53) 4.22 (2.48) ** 0.79 (1.90) * 80.30 (0.06) 3.34 (2.83) *** 0.58 (1. 95) * 13.28 (0.51)
Note: *significant at 10%; **significant at 5%;***significant at 1% Table 1 reports coefficient estimates. The CSR clearly appears to increase the firm reputation, which indicates good CSR has positive effect on firm reputation. It is also showed that CG and CR doesnt have significant relationship, but coefficient of the inter-variableCG*CSRis significant and positive, which reflects that good corporate governance alone couldnt bring good reputation, but it could when it comes with good social responsibility. So we have conclusion that reputation of real
China Corporate Social Responsibility Index includes seven sub-indexes of corporate donation, transparency, employment, taxation, environment protection, employee safeguard, honesty and
3
W
i =1
i*
estate firms in china mostly come from good behavior in product market, and good corporate governance can defend corporate reputation from becoming worse.
References [1]Andrews, K. The Concept of the Corporation. 1980Homewood, IL: Irwin. [2]Asyraf Wajdi DusukiHumayon DarDoes Corporate Social Responsibility Pay Off? An Emirical Examination Of Stakeholder Perspectives Working Paper, 2006Loughborough University Department of Economics [3] Caspar Rose and Steen Thomsen, The Impact of Corporate Reputation on Performance:Some Danish Evidence, European Management Journal2004Vol. 22, No. 2, pp. 201210, [4] Donaldson, T. & Preston, L. 1995. The stakeholder theory of the modern corporation: Concepts, evidence and implications. Academy of Management Review 20, pp.65-91 [5] Fombrun, C. J. Reputation: Realizing value from the corporate image. 1996,Boston: Harvard Business School Press. [6] Fombrun, C. and Shanley, M., Whats in a name? Reputation building and corporate strategy. Academy of Management Journal ,1990(2), pp. 233258. [7] Freeman, R. E., The politics of stakeholder theory. Bus. Ethics Quart.1994(4) , pp.409421. [8] Freeman R. E, Andrew C. Wicks, Bidhan Parmar,Stakeholder Theory and The Corporate Objective Revisited,Organization Science,Vol. 15, No. 3, MayJune 2004, pp. 364369 [9] Goodpaster, K. E. "Business Ethics and Stakeholder", in. T. L. Beauchamp and N. E. Bowie, Ethical theory and business, 2001,Prentice Hall Int., Upper Saddle River, N.J. 6th Edition. [10] Karen Cravens, Oliver, Ramaroomti, The Reputation Index: Measuring and Managing Corporate ReputationEuropean Management Journal, 2003,Vol. 21, No. 2, pp. 201212, [11]Khermouch, G., Holmes, S. and Ihlwan, M. The best global brands. Business Week 6 August,2001, pp. 5064. [12] Lev, Baruch, Christine Petrovits, and Suresh Radhakrishnan, Is Doing Good Good for You?Yes, Charitable Contributions Enhance Revenue Growth, Working Paper, 2006,New York University Stern School of Business. [13]Michael Hopkins, Corporate social responsibility:an issues paper, working paper, 2004,Policy Integration Department World Commission on the Social Dimension of Globalization International Labour Office [14] Roger C, Vergin and M.W, Qoronfleh, Corporate Reputation and the Stock Market, business Horizons, January-Feburary 1998:19-26