Sluggish market demand can deteriorate the financial situation of a company and affect a shareholder's decision to adopt environmental, social, and governance criteria (ESG). According to the socioemotional wealth theory, family firms place significant emphasis on sustainable development and long-term orientation, but this emphasis can be either internally or externally driven according to the type of involvement chosen by the owning family. Therefore, this study uses listed family firms to explore the relationship between different types of family involvement (i.e., family ownership and control, the influence of market competition, and the institutionalisation level of the environment in which a firm decides to pursue ESG criteria). We performed a multivariate regression analysis on a sample of 1,151 Chinese companies to test these relationships and found that both family ownership and control are positively related to ESG scores. Market competition negatively moderates the influence of both family ownership and control on the adoption of ESG criteria. Moreover, the influence of family control is negatively moderated by the institutional environment. Thus, types of family involvement seem to be relevant for the firm's engagement with ESG criteria.

Sun, J., Pellegrini, M., Dabić, M., Wang, K., Wang, C. (2023). Family ownership and control as drivers for environmental, social, and governance in family firms. REVIEW OF MANAGERIAL SCIENCE [10.1007/s11846-023-00631-2].

Family ownership and control as drivers for environmental, social, and governance in family firms

Pellegrini M.;
2023-01-01

Abstract

Sluggish market demand can deteriorate the financial situation of a company and affect a shareholder's decision to adopt environmental, social, and governance criteria (ESG). According to the socioemotional wealth theory, family firms place significant emphasis on sustainable development and long-term orientation, but this emphasis can be either internally or externally driven according to the type of involvement chosen by the owning family. Therefore, this study uses listed family firms to explore the relationship between different types of family involvement (i.e., family ownership and control, the influence of market competition, and the institutionalisation level of the environment in which a firm decides to pursue ESG criteria). We performed a multivariate regression analysis on a sample of 1,151 Chinese companies to test these relationships and found that both family ownership and control are positively related to ESG scores. Market competition negatively moderates the influence of both family ownership and control on the adoption of ESG criteria. Moreover, the influence of family control is negatively moderated by the institutional environment. Thus, types of family involvement seem to be relevant for the firm's engagement with ESG criteria.
2023
Online ahead of print
Rilevanza internazionale
Articolo
Esperti anonimi
Settore SECS-P/10 - ORGANIZZAZIONE AZIENDALE
English
Con Impact Factor ISI
ESG criteria
Family involvement
Family ownership
Family control
Socioemotional wealth theory
Sun, J., Pellegrini, M., Dabić, M., Wang, K., Wang, C. (2023). Family ownership and control as drivers for environmental, social, and governance in family firms. REVIEW OF MANAGERIAL SCIENCE [10.1007/s11846-023-00631-2].
Sun, J; Pellegrini, M; Dabić, M; Wang, K; Wang, C
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2108/330875
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