Highlights
We identify determinants of banks’ voluntary climate change disclosure and quality.
Based on data of 117 banks worldwide, banks want to be seen as good citizens.
However, the picture is unclear for rigorous carbon disclosure.
Our results support stakeholder and legitimacy theory as well as greenwashing.
There is a gap between displaying responsible behavior and actual practice.
This paper seeks to establish the relationship between economic efficiency and social efficiency to analyze the sustainability of banking in Europe. The type-effect has been analyzed, as stakeholder value banks—cooperatives and saving banks—should not be less socially and economically efficient than commercial banks. This European analysis was made using the Bankscope database, as it provides a unique insight into the stakeholder view that clarifies, by an analysis of two-stage boundaries, that there is no single model of social and economic efficiency according to the type of financial entity in Europe. These findings contribute to the social cost paradox and shared value perspective, and more broadly to stakeholder theory. It is established that a tradeoff between economic and social efficiency is not needed. There are different behaviors in different European countries. Moreover, our results could lead to the development of social indicators of the sustainability aspects of organizations without resorting to traditional accounting.
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