Catholic Social Thought and Sustainability. Ethical and Economic Alignment †
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. Sustainability as an Ethical and Economic Construct
1.2. Research Question and Hypotheses Formulation
- Business sustainability can be grounded and enriched based on the corpus of the Social Doctrine of the Catholic Church.
- Business sustainability has a clear economic logic, which can also be empirically confirmed.
- We have based the concept of sustainability from an ethical perspective, focusing mainly on the SDC. We have also been able to enrich the concept of sustainability based on the principles and values of the SDC, thus confirming the first hypothesis.
- We have developed the economic bases of sustainability, also reviewing some empirical contrasts that study this problem, and that mostly confirm that sustainable companies surpass from an economic point of view those that are not sustainable. We have also made our own empirical contrast concluding that sustainable companies have equal or greater financial performance than non-sustainable ones, which corroborates their economic logic and confirms our second hypothesis.
2. The Social Doctrine of the Catholic Church
“According to the Compendium of the Social Doctrine of the Church (CSDC), Catholic Social Thought can be synthesized around four interrelated principles (with other two attached principles): human dignity (human beings being created at the image of God) (CSDC 108), the common good (in relation with the principle of universal destination of goods), subsidiarity (linked with the principle of participation), and solidarity.”
“The role of the firm in economic activity according to Catholic Social Thought is based also in a conception of the human being (anthropology) that recognizes the individuality of each person (an individual with his/her own interests to follow, in competition with others) and the relational dimension of the very same person (an individual with shared goals, able to work in cooperation and solidarity with others)…”
2.1. On the Role of the State
“Rights must be religiously respected wherever they exist, and it is the duty of the public authority to prevent and to punish injury, and to protect every one in the possession of his own. Still, when there is question of defending the rights of individuals, the poor and badly off have a claim to especial consideration. The richer class have many ways of shielding themselves, and stand less in need of help from the State; whereas the mass of the poor have no resources of their own to fall back upon, and must chiefly depend upon the assistance of the State. And it is for this reason that wage-earners, since they mostly belong in the mass of the needy, should be specially cared for and protected by the government.”
2.2. A First Approach to the Concept of Sustainability
2.3. Social Doctrine of the Church and Sustainability
2.4. As an Epilogue of Section 2
3. Sustainability
3.1. Business Sustainability
- First generation: civil and political rights.
- Second generation: economic, social and cultural rights.
- Third generation: environmental rights and the right to peace.
3.2. Business Sustainability: Instrument of Management and Measure of Prudence
4. The Financial Performance
4.1. Performance and Its Measurement
4.2. Market Indices Selection
4.3. Empirical Contrast
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Principles | Human Dignity | Common Good | Subsidiarity | Solidarity |
Complementary Principles | Universal Destination of Goods | Participation |
Values | Truth | Freedom | Justice | Love |
The individuality of each person; with his or her own interests to achieve, in competition with others. | It is necessary to look for the balance between ↔ | The relational nature of the human person allows him or her to share objectives, cooperate with others and show solidarity. |
Performance Indices | Risk Measured with σ | Risk Measured with β |
---|---|---|
Quotient-based penalization | SHARPE | TREYNOR |
Linear penalization | PIRR | JENSEN |
Conventional Index | ESG Index | Scope |
---|---|---|
MSCI ACWI | MSCI ACWI ESG | Worldwide/Global |
MSCI Emerging Markets | MSCI Emerging Markets ESG | Emerging Markets |
MSCI Europe | MSCI Europe ESG | Europe |
MSCI USA | MSCI USA ESG | USA |
IBEX 35 | FTSE4Good IBEX | Spain |
ACWI (GLOBAL INDEX) | EMERGING | EUROPE | USA | IBEX 35 | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
ESG Index | CONV Index | ESG Index | CONV Index | ESG Index | CONV Index | ESG Index | CONV Index | ESG Index | CONV Index | |
Average | 0.5714% | 0.5746% | 0.5414% | 0.3885% | 0.2984% | 0.2372% | 1.0277% | 1.0971% | 0.2721% | 0.2161% |
Variance | 0.1092% | 0.1145% | 0.1972% | 0.2121% | 0.3223% | 0.3237% | 0.1094% | 0.1141% | 0.1922% | 0.1961% |
Standard deviation | 3.3040% | 3.3831% | 4.4409% | 4.6054% | 5.6770% | 5.6895% | 3.3072% | 3.3776% | 4.3845% | 4.4286% |
PERFORMANCE INDICES | ||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
ACWI (GLOBAL INDEX) | EMERGING | EUROPE | USA | IBEX 35 | ||||||
ESG Index | CONV Index | ESG Index | CONV Index | ESG Index | CONV Index | ESG Index | CONV Index | ESG Index | CONV Index | |
Jensen | 0.0108% | 0.0000% | 0.1686% | 0.0000% | 0.0624% | 0.0000% | −0.0363% | 0.0000% | 0.0610% | 0.0000% |
PIRR | 0.0766% | 0.0679% | 0.2322% | 0.0679% | 0.1057% | 0.0442% | −0.0105% | 0.0369% | 0.0153% | −0.0433% |
PIRR-rO | 0.0087% | 0.0000% | 0.1643% | 0.0000% | 0.0616% | 0.0000% | −0.0473% | 0.0000% | 0.0585% | 0.0000% |
Sharpe | 15.2395% | 14.9755% | 10.6609% | 6.9609% | 4.4781% | 3.3932% | 29.9591% | 31.3905% | 7.1920% | 5.8572% |
Treynor | 0.5177% | 0.5066% | 0.4979% | 0.3206% | 0.2559% | 0.1931% | 1.0228% | 1.0602% | 0.3216% | 0.2594% |
ESG Index | CONV Index | No. of Observations (Months) | BETA | R2 | Difference of Averages PROB > /T/ (N.D.) | Difference of Averages PROB > (NO N.D.) | Difference of Averages Test Ho = 0 | Beta Ho = 1 | Equality of Variances Test Ho Var(A) = Var(B) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Global M2WDESR Index | Global M2WD Index | 51 | 0.9725 | 0.9916 | 0.9434 | 0.7116 | YES | NO | YES |
Emerging M2EFESR Index | Emerging M2EF Index | 51 | 0.9508 | 0.9723 | 0.1638 | 0.1185 | YES | NO | YES |
Europe M2EUES Index | Europe M2EU Index | 136 | 0.9936 | 0.9915 | 0.1758 | 0.1943 | YES | YES | YES |
USA TUSSLMU Index | USA M2US Index | 100 | 0.9688 | 0.9786 | 0.1619 | 0.1355 | YES | NO | YES |
Spain IBXF4GNT Index | Spain IBEX35TR Index | 58 | 0.9805 | 0.9805 | 0.4892 | 0.4739 | YES | YES | YES |
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Gómez-Bezares, A.M.; Gómez-Bezares, F. Catholic Social Thought and Sustainability. Ethical and Economic Alignment. J. Risk Financial Manag. 2021, 14, 11. https://doi.org/10.3390/jrfm14010011
Gómez-Bezares AM, Gómez-Bezares F. Catholic Social Thought and Sustainability. Ethical and Economic Alignment. Journal of Risk and Financial Management. 2021; 14(1):11. https://doi.org/10.3390/jrfm14010011
Chicago/Turabian StyleGómez-Bezares, Ana María, and Fernando Gómez-Bezares. 2021. "Catholic Social Thought and Sustainability. Ethical and Economic Alignment" Journal of Risk and Financial Management 14, no. 1: 11. https://doi.org/10.3390/jrfm14010011
APA StyleGómez-Bezares, A. M., & Gómez-Bezares, F. (2021). Catholic Social Thought and Sustainability. Ethical and Economic Alignment. Journal of Risk and Financial Management, 14(1), 11. https://doi.org/10.3390/jrfm14010011