2016
DOI: 10.1002/csr.1390
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Value Relevance of Stakeholder Engagement: The Influence of National Culture

Abstract: Our study investigates whether stakeholder engagement is associated with a firm's valuation and the value relevance of accounting earnings. Since prior literature posits that the economic consequences of such practices may depend on the specific environment in which they are adopted, we also explore whether these associations are affected by the cultural traits of the country in which a firm operates. Based on a worldwide sample of firms for the period 2002 to 2014, we document that stakeholder engagement posi… Show more

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Cited by 50 publications
(47 citation statements)
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References 61 publications
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“…For example, clean package design and presence of the recycle symbol are two effective ways of marketing green products to millennials (Smith & Brower, 2012). Additionally, firms frequently publicize their sustainability initiatives to enhance the green image of their firm separately from specific products (Chamorro & Bañegil, 2006;Dal Maso, Liberatore, & Mazzi, 2017). In addition to environmental friendliness, consumers expect added benefits from green products, such as cost savings or improved efficiency (Lu et al, 2013;Zahid, Ali, Ahmad, Thurasamy, & Amin, 2018).…”
Section: Marketing and Sustainable Consumptionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For example, clean package design and presence of the recycle symbol are two effective ways of marketing green products to millennials (Smith & Brower, 2012). Additionally, firms frequently publicize their sustainability initiatives to enhance the green image of their firm separately from specific products (Chamorro & Bañegil, 2006;Dal Maso, Liberatore, & Mazzi, 2017). In addition to environmental friendliness, consumers expect added benefits from green products, such as cost savings or improved efficiency (Lu et al, 2013;Zahid, Ali, Ahmad, Thurasamy, & Amin, 2018).…”
Section: Marketing and Sustainable Consumptionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In particular, when powerful stakeholders actively try to interfere with the actions of a company, their pressures can affect CSP, and their engagement may influence the choices of a company's management whether or not to report on specific issues and whether or not to comply with reporting standards (Fordham & Robinson, 2018). Thus, processes in which stakeholders actively pressure a firm to operate more sustainable, and which influence management's choices concerning corporate sustainability reporting may reduce the information asymmetry between the company and its stakeholders (Dal Maso et al, 2017) but also positively influence the companies' competitive position (Lozano & Huisingh, 2011). Inclusivity of such stakeholders may drive sustainable value creation and affect a company management's decisions to disclose material sustainability information and to prepare the sustainability report in accordance with SRC and guidelines (Global Reporting Initiative, 2013; Moratis & Brandt, 2017).…”
Section: Theoretical Framework and Hypothesesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…First, this study is among the first to systematically explore the (inter)relation among CG mechanisms, CSP, SRQ, and SRC. Although previous research acknowledges that board monitoring effectiveness and stakeholder engagement may influence CSP, SRQ, and SRC, the underlying effects are still empirically underexplored (Amran, Lee, & Devi, 2014;Dal Maso, Liberatore, & Mazzi, 2017;Hahn & Kühnen, 2013;Helfaya & Moussa, 2017). This is particularly true for the CG effects on CSP, which have only recently received some initial scholarly attention (Shaukat, Qiu, & Trojanowski, 2016).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Traditionally, the effects of CSP on firm performance have been explained using the resource-based view, stakeholder theory, and institutional theory (Dal Maso et al, 2017;Doh and Tashman, 2014;Fowler and Hope, 2007b;Walker and Mercado, 2015). Simply put, CSP-related theories that draw on the resource-based view (for a discussion, see Branco and Rodrigues, 2006) argue that SR is a valuable and non-substitutable resource that can, in and of itself, lead to a competitive advantage, or lead to the acquisition and development of tangible and intangible assets that ultimately determine a firm's competitive advantage.…”
Section: Conceptual Background and Hypotheses Development Csp And Firmentioning
confidence: 99%