“…Some studies established a positive relationship between ESG disclosure and firm value in different settings (Matsumura et al, 2013;Qureshi et al, 2020): A UK study indicates a negative correlation (Alsaifi et al, 2020); a US study concludes value relevance of certain ESG attributes (Mǎnescu, 2011); a recent study concludes value irrelevance of environmental pillar of ESG (Jadoon et al, 2021); and another recent study of Chinese firms finds a positive association of CEP with corporate financial performance (CFP) as well as the firm value of financially non-constrained firms; however, this relationship turns negative for financially constrained firms (Akbar et al, 2021). As such, ESG-value nexus is still inconclusive (Fatemi et al, 2018;Hannah et al, 2020) due to short-term-versus-long-term trade-offs experienced by the firms (Delmas et al, 2015) in different settings wherein culture as a value system (Meadows, 1998;Miska et al, 2018) shapes the practices of individuals as well as institutions of society (G. Hofstede, 2001;Ioannou and Serafeim, 2012;Yu et al, 2019). However, none of the previous studies investigating ESG-value nexus used all six cultural dimensions (Geert Hofstede, 1984;Minkov et al, 2013), but some of the studies used some cultural dimensions (Gallego-Álvarez and Ortas, 2017;Hartmann and Uhlenbruck, 2015;Ho et al, 2012;Husted, 2005;Ioannou and Serafeim, 2012;Miska et al, 2018;Park et al, 2007;Ringov and Zollo, 2007) and only one study uses all six dimensions to investigate corporate environmental reporting (Gallego-Álvarez and Ortas, 2017).…”