Do CEO incentives and characteristics influence Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) and vice versa? A literature review
Research output: Journal contributions › Scientific review articles › Research
Authors
Purpose – This paper aims to analyze whether chief executive officer (CEO) incentives and characteristics (e.g. CEO power, CEO tenure) are linked with corporate social responsibility (CSR) and vice versa.
Design/methodology/approach – Based on upper echelons theory, the author conducts a structured literature review and evaluates 84 empirical-quantitative studies on CEOand CSR variables.
Findings – While the majority of the included studies analyzed the CEO-CSR link, there are indicators for a bidirectional relationship. Moreover, prior research has focused on CEO incentives, especially compensation contracts, and on the US capital market. A major research gap relates to CEO characteristics, e.g. CEOvalues, education and experience.
Research limitations/implications – Heterogeneous CEO and CSR variables and endogeneity concerns lower the validity of recent studies. Future research is encouraged to implement dynamic regression models, increase CSR and CEO proxies and focus on international samples with country specific effects.
Practical implications – As CEO activities can have a major impact on CSR activities, the author recommends firms to search for opportunities to make their CSR strategy more comprehensive by their stakeholder communication, thus providing deeper insights into their CSR performance in line with stakeholders’ interests.
Originality/value – The paper is the first literature review on the interaction between CEO and CSR so far. The author explains the main CEO and CSR variables that have been included in research, stresses the limitations of the studies and gives useful recommendations for future research, practice and regulators.
Design/methodology/approach – Based on upper echelons theory, the author conducts a structured literature review and evaluates 84 empirical-quantitative studies on CEOand CSR variables.
Findings – While the majority of the included studies analyzed the CEO-CSR link, there are indicators for a bidirectional relationship. Moreover, prior research has focused on CEO incentives, especially compensation contracts, and on the US capital market. A major research gap relates to CEO characteristics, e.g. CEOvalues, education and experience.
Research limitations/implications – Heterogeneous CEO and CSR variables and endogeneity concerns lower the validity of recent studies. Future research is encouraged to implement dynamic regression models, increase CSR and CEO proxies and focus on international samples with country specific effects.
Practical implications – As CEO activities can have a major impact on CSR activities, the author recommends firms to search for opportunities to make their CSR strategy more comprehensive by their stakeholder communication, thus providing deeper insights into their CSR performance in line with stakeholders’ interests.
Originality/value – The paper is the first literature review on the interaction between CEO and CSR so far. The author explains the main CEO and CSR variables that have been included in research, stresses the limitations of the studies and gives useful recommendations for future research, practice and regulators.
Original language | English |
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Journal | Social Responsibility Journal |
Volume | 16 |
Issue number | 8 |
Pages (from-to) | 1293-1323 |
Number of pages | 31 |
ISSN | 1747-1117 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 20.10.2020 |
- Management studies - Corporate Social Responsibility, CSR disclosure, CSR performance, Upper echelons theory, CEO incentives, Chief executive officer (CEO)
- Sustainability Science