Abstract
To investigate the impact of institutional investors on firms’ corporate social responsibility (CSR) engagement while controlling for possible endogeneity concerns, we study how Chinese listed firms adjust their CSR decisions when their institutional investors are distracted by exogenous attention-grabbing events and thus are inattentive. With a sample of Chinese listed firms from 2009 to 2017, we find a significant and robust negative relationship between institutional investor inattention and firms’ CSR engagement. This negative relationship is more pronounced for firms with more principal–agent problems and/or weaker corporate governances and is more attributable to the inattention of institutional investors with more monitoring incentives. These findings suggest that managers are less motivated to engage in CSR when they are less monitored by institutional investors, indicating that CSR is beneficial to shareholders of Chinese listed firms. Our findings also indicate that the positive impact of institutional investors on CSR may be constrained by their limited attention.
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Notes
Additionally, see Faller and Knyphausen-Aufsess (2018) for a literature review regarding the impact of institutional ownership on CSR.
According to Kempf et al. (2017), the Investor Responsibility Research Center Institute (IRRC 2011) in America conducted a large-scale survey in 2011 and stated that “three-fourths of institutions report that time is the most common impediment to engagement [with corporations], while staffing considerations rank second.”
According to a survey reported in the China Sustainable Investment Review 2019, 89% of the respondents said that they are not familiar with environmental, social and governance (ESG) investment, and 44% of them have never heard about “green investment”, “social responsibility investment” or “ESG”. See http://f.sinaimg.cn/client/ebe07d0f/20191205/ChinaSIF2019.pdf.
For instance, approximately 43% of Chinese listed firms do not even disclose CSR reports in our sample period.
Namely, these types are insurance companies, public mutual funds, the national social security fund, exchange-traded funds, overseas institutional investors, corporate annuity plans, banks, trust companies, brokerage firms, and private investment funds.
As discussed later in Sect. 4.4.1, insurance companies, mutual funds, and the national security fund are the three largest institutional investors in the Chinese A-share market. The institutional ownership of other institutional investors is relatively minor.
We follow the industry classifications issued by the China Securities Regulatory Commission (CSRC) in 2012 and classify stocks into 19 industries.
See Sect. 2.2 in Kempf et al. (2017) for a detailed discussion on this.
There are two stock exchanges in China, that is, the Shanghai Stock Exchange (SSE) and the Shenzhen Stock Exchange. Firms listed on SSE are not required to disclose site visit events. Please see Cheng et al. (2016b, 2019), and Han et al. (2018) for details regarding the institution background of site visits in the Chinese A-share market.
Overseas institutional investors in the Chinese A-share market include Qualified Foreign Institutional Investors (QFII), RMB Qualified Foreign Institutional Investors (RQFII) and other overseas institutional investors that are able to trade stocks of Chinese A-share listed firms with the Shanghai-Hong Kong Stock Connect program or the Shenzhen-Hong Kong Stock Connect program.
The national security fund is actually the largest single institutional investor in China. By the end of 2017, the market value of A-share stocks held by the national security fund was over 240 billion yuan (or 35 billion dollars).
Please see Bushee (1998) for detailed descriptions of the nine variables.
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Acknowledgements
This study was supported by the China Postdoctoral Science Foundation (Grant No. 2018M643401), the Natural Science Foundation of Chongqing, China (cstc2019jcyj-bshX0087), the National Natural Science Foundation of China (Grant NoS. 71772019, 71973018) and the Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities (Grant No. 2019CDSKXYJG0037).
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Appendix: Variable definitions
Appendix: Variable definitions
Variables | Definitions | Data sources |
---|---|---|
Score i,t | The total RKS CSR score of firm i in year t | RKS |
M i,t | The RKS macrocosm score of firm i in year t | RKS |
C i,t | The RKS content score of firm i in year t | RKS |
T i,t | The RKS technique score of firm i in year t | RKS |
I i,t | The RKS industry score of firm i in year t | RKS |
DDis i,t | Dummy that equals 1 if firm i volunteers to disclose its CSR report in year t | RKS |
HXScore i,t | The total CSR score of firm i in year t assigned by hexun.com | hexun.com |
SHolder i,t | The shareholder responsibility score of firm i in year t assigned by hexun.com | hexun.com |
Employee i,t | The employee responsibility score of firm i in year t assigned by hexun.com | hexun.com |
Customer i,t | The customer responsibility score of firm i in year t assigned by hexun.com | hexun.com |
Envir i,t | The environmental responsibility score of firm i in year t assigned by hexun.com | hexun.com |
Social i,t | The social responsibility score of firm i in year t assigned by hexun.com | hexun.com |
DVisit i,t | Dummy that equals 1 if firm i is visited by institutional investors at least once in year t and 0 otherwise | Firm annual reports |
NVisit i,t | The log of 1 plus the number of times firm i is visited by institutional investors in year t | Firm annual reports |
DManu i,t | Dummy that equals 1 if firm i is in the manufacturing industry and 0 otherwise | CSMAR |
DRate i,t | Dummy that equals 1 if the information disclosure quality of firm i is relatively poor and hence is rated as C or D by the Shenzhen Stock Exchange (SZSE) and 0 otherwise | CSMAR |
Ret i,t | The market-adjusted stock return of firm i in year t | CSMAR |
Age i,t | The log of years for which firm i has been listing in SZSE | CSMAR |
MShare i,t | The market share of firm i in year t | CSMAR |
NFirms i,t | The log of the total number of listed firms in the city where firm i is headquartered | CSMAR |
GDPGrowth i,t | The GDP growth of the city where firm i is headquartered | CSMAR |
CSMAR | ||
InAtt i,t | The firm-level measure of institutional investor inattention following (Kempf et al. 2017) | Wind |
\( InAttI_{i,t}^{n} \) | The firm-level inattention of the nth institution type of institutional investors, n = 1, 2, …, 10. Types 1 to 10 refers to insurance companies, public mutual funds, the national social security fund, exchange-traded funds, overseas institutional investors, corporate annuity plans, banks, trust companies, brokerage firms, and private investment funds, respectively | Wind |
InAttD i,t | The firm-level inattention of dedicated institutional investors | Wind |
InAttT i,t | The firm-level inattention of transient institutional investors | Wind |
InAttQ i,t | The firm-level inattention of quasi-indexers | Wind |
BM i,t | Book value of assets over the market value of assets | CSMAR |
Size i,t | The log of total year-end assets (in billion yuan) | CSMAR |
ROA i,t | The return on assets in the year of t | CSMAR |
Lev i,t | Total debt divided by total assets | CSMAR |
SOE i,t | Dummy that equals 1 for state-owned enterprises and equals 0 otherwise | CSMAR |
Capex i,t | Capital expenditure scaled by total assets | CSMAR |
AC i,t | The log of the number of analysts following in year t | CSMAR |
IO i,t | The total share percentage of institutional investors by the end of year t | CSMAR |
BInep i,t | The percentage of independent board directors | CSMAR |
BSize i,t | The log of the number of board directors | CSMAR |
Duality i,t | Dummy that equals 1 if the CEO also chairs the board | CSMAR |
MO i,t | The share percentage of the top management team by the end of year t | CSMAR |
TOP1 i,t | The share percentage of the largest shareholder by the end of year t | CSMAR |
HHI5 i,t | The Herfindahl–Hirschman Index of share percentage of the top 5 shareholders | CSMAR |
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Xiang, C., Chen, F., Jones, P. et al. The effect of institutional investors’ distraction on firms’ corporate social responsibility engagement: evidence from China. Rev Manag Sci 15, 1645–1681 (2021). https://doi.org/10.1007/s11846-020-00387-z
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s11846-020-00387-z