Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/10071/37260
Author(s): Lopes, A. I.
Date: 2026
Title: Do CSR committees pay off? Direct and indirect links to financial and ESG performance
Journal title: Corporate Social Responsibility and Environmental Management
Volume: N/A
Reference: Lopes, A. I. (2026). Do CSR committees pay off? Direct and indirect links to financial and ESG performance. Corporate Social Responsibility and Environmental Management. https://doi.org/10.1002/csr.70668
ISSN: 1535-3958
DOI (Digital Object Identifier): 10.1002/csr.70668
Keywords: Corporate governance
CSR committee
CSR strategy
ESG performance
Mediation analysis
Stakeholder engagement
Sustainability reporting
Abstract: Corporate boards increasingly delegate sustainability oversight to dedicated CSR committees, yet evidence on whether these committees improve corporate performance remains mixed. This study argues that part of this inconsistency arises because prior research often emphasizes overall associations between CSR committees and performance without distinguishing between direct links and indirect benefits that operate through stakeholder-oriented CSR strategy and reporting practices. Using an unbalanced panel of 7667 firm-year observations from 1621 listed firms across 36 countries over 2010–2021, this study tests a mediation framework in which these practices transmit the relationship between CSR committee presence and both financial and nonfinancial outcomes. Results reveal a clear tension. Controlling for the mediator, CSR committee is directly associated with lower financial performance but higher ESG performance. At the same time, CSR committee presence is strongly associated with stronger stakeholder-oriented CSR strategy and reporting practices, which are positively related to both financial and ESG outcomes, generating a positive indirect effect that exceeds the direct effect in magnitude. These inferences are corroborated using instrumental-variables estimation and a simultaneous-equations approach to mitigate endogeneity concerns. Overall, the findings suggest that CSR committees “pay off” primarily through the stakeholder-oriented practices they help institutionalize, rather than through their mere existence.
Peerreviewed: yes
Access type: Open Access
Appears in Collections:BRU-RI - Artigos em revistas científicas internacionais com arbitragem científica

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