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Keywords = corporate innovation quality

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39 pages, 1121 KiB  
Article
Digital Finance, Financing Constraints, and Green Innovation in Chinese Firms: The Roles of Management Power and CSR
by Qiong Zhang and Zhihong Mao
Sustainability 2025, 17(15), 7110; https://doi.org/10.3390/su17157110 - 6 Aug 2025
Abstract
With the increasing global emphasis on sustainable development goals, and in the context of pursuing high-quality sustainable development of the economy and enterprises, this study empirically examines the effect of digital finance on corporate financing constraints and the impact on corporate green innovation [...] Read more.
With the increasing global emphasis on sustainable development goals, and in the context of pursuing high-quality sustainable development of the economy and enterprises, this study empirically examines the effect of digital finance on corporate financing constraints and the impact on corporate green innovation with a sample of China’s A-share-listed companies in the period of 2011–2020 and explores the issue from the perspectives of management power and corporate social responsibility (CSR) at the micro level of enterprises. The empirical results show that digital finance can indeed alleviate corporate financing constraints. Still, the synergistic effect of the two on corporate green innovation produces a “quantitative and qualitative separation” effect, which only promotes the enhancement of iconic green innovation, and the effect on substantive green innovation is not obvious. The power of management and CSR performanceshave different moderating roles in the alleviation of financing constraints by the empowerment of digital finance. Management power and corporate social responsibility have different moderating effects on digital financial empowerment to alleviate financing constraints. The findings of this study enrich the research in related fields and provide more basis for the promotion of digital financial policies and more solutions for the high-quality development of enterprises. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Advances in Economic Development and Business Management)
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29 pages, 1867 KiB  
Article
Exploring the Triple Dividend Effect and Threshold Effect of Environmental Protection Tax: Evidence from Chinese Listed Companies
by Chenghao Ye, Hongjie Gao and Igor A. Mayburov
Sustainability 2025, 17(15), 7038; https://doi.org/10.3390/su17157038 - 3 Aug 2025
Viewed by 298
Abstract
This study uses financial data from 872 Chinese listed companies (2018–2022). It tests the triple dividend effect and threshold effect of China’s environmental protection tax (EPT) using high-dimensional fixed effects models and panel threshold models. We document that (1) EPT creates an environmental [...] Read more.
This study uses financial data from 872 Chinese listed companies (2018–2022). It tests the triple dividend effect and threshold effect of China’s environmental protection tax (EPT) using high-dimensional fixed effects models and panel threshold models. We document that (1) EPT creates an environmental dividend for Chinese listed companies. It significantly reduces pollution emissions. A 1-unit tax increase reduces LnTPPE by 2.5%. (2) EPT creates a significant innovation dividend. It forces enterprises to improve the quality of authorized patents. A 1-unit tax increase raises patent technological complexity by 0.79%. (3) EPT creates an economic dividend. It significantly improves firm performance. A 1-unit tax increase raises relative corporate revenue by 38.1%. (4) EPT exerts significant threshold effects on micro-level triple dividend outcomes among Chinese listed companies. A heterogeneity analysis shows significant differences in threshold effects between non-heavily polluting and heavily polluting industries. This study confirms that China’s EPT generates a micro-level triple dividend effect alongside coexisting threshold effects for listed companies. This provides literature references for China to design and implement differentiated policies and offers a quantitative empirical case for implementing globally sustainable EPT strategies. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Air, Climate Change and Sustainability)
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24 pages, 771 KiB  
Article
The Impact of Preferential Policy on Corporate Green Innovation: A Resource Dependence Perspective
by Chenshuo Li, Shihan Feng, Qingyu Yuan, Jiahui Wei, Shiqi Wang and Dongdong Huang
Sustainability 2025, 17(15), 6834; https://doi.org/10.3390/su17156834 - 28 Jul 2025
Viewed by 532
Abstract
Government support has long been viewed as a key driver of sustainable transformation and green technological progress. However, the underlying mechanisms (“how”) through which preferential policies influence green innovation, as well as the contextual conditions (“when”) that shape their [...] Read more.
Government support has long been viewed as a key driver of sustainable transformation and green technological progress. However, the underlying mechanisms (“how”) through which preferential policies influence green innovation, as well as the contextual conditions (“when”) that shape their effectiveness, remain insufficiently understood. Drawing on resource dependence theory, this study develops a dual-mediation framework to investigate how preferential tax policies promote both the quantity and quality of green innovation—by enhancing R&D investment as an internal mechanism and alleviating financing constraints as an external mechanism. These effects are especially salient among non-state-owned enterprises, firms in resource-constrained industries, and those situated in environmentally challenged regions—contexts that entail higher dependence on external support for sustainable development. Leveraging China’s 2017 R&D tax reduction policy as a quasi-natural experiment, this study uses a sample of high-tech small- and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) to test the hypotheses. The findings provide robust evidence on how preferential policies contribute to corporate sustainability through green innovation and identify the conditions under which policy tools are most effective. This research offers important implications for designing targeted, sustainability-oriented innovation policies that support SMEs in transitioning toward more sustainable practices. Full article
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14 pages, 243 KiB  
Entry
COSO-Based Internal Control and Comprehensive Enterprise Risk Management: Institutional Background and Research Evidence from China
by Hanwen Chen, Shenghua Wang, Daoguang Yang and Nan Zhou
Encyclopedia 2025, 5(3), 106; https://doi.org/10.3390/encyclopedia5030106 - 23 Jul 2025
Viewed by 580
Definition
China’s internal control framework follows the Committee of Sponsoring Organizations (COSO) framework, emphasizing enterprise risk management and encompassing financial reporting, operations, compliance, and strategies. The authors review research that uses the COSO-based Internal Control Index to assess internal control quality among all publicly [...] Read more.
China’s internal control framework follows the Committee of Sponsoring Organizations (COSO) framework, emphasizing enterprise risk management and encompassing financial reporting, operations, compliance, and strategies. The authors review research that uses the COSO-based Internal Control Index to assess internal control quality among all publicly listed firms in China. Unlike the binary classification of internal control weaknesses under the Sarbanes-Oxley Act Section 404, this continuous index captures more nuanced variations in internal control effectiveness and provides two key advantages over traditional assessment of internal control over financial reporting (ICFR). First, while financial reporting can enhance a firm’s monitoring and decision-support systems, the underlying information is determined by operations. Thus, internal control over operations has a greater impact on a firm’s performance than ICFR. While U.S.-based research argues that the effects of ICFR extend to operations, the COSO-based index includes operational controls, allowing for a more direct study of internal control effects. Second, many U.S. corporations fail to report internal control weaknesses, particularly during misstatement years. In contrast, the COSO-based index, compiled by independent scholars, avoids managerial incentives to withhold negative internal control information. Covering institutional background and research evidence from China, the authors survey a wide range of internal control studies related to various aspects of enterprise risk management, such as earnings quality, crash risk, stock liquidity, resource extraction, cash holdings, mergers and acquisitions, corporate innovation, receivable management, operational efficiency, tax avoidance, and diversification strategy. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Social Sciences)
19 pages, 485 KiB  
Article
The Green Finance Reform Pilot Zone Policy and Corporate Sustainable Development Performance: A Quasi-Natural Experiment from China
by Shunping Teng and Haslindar Ibrahim
Sustainability 2025, 17(15), 6674; https://doi.org/10.3390/su17156674 - 22 Jul 2025
Viewed by 259
Abstract
This study investigates the effect of the Green Finance Reform Pilot Zone Policy (GFRPZP) on corporate sustainable development performance (SDP) using a multi-period difference-in-differences (DIDs) regression model. This model incorporates control variables, reflecting firm-level characteristics and regional economic conditions. The results show that [...] Read more.
This study investigates the effect of the Green Finance Reform Pilot Zone Policy (GFRPZP) on corporate sustainable development performance (SDP) using a multi-period difference-in-differences (DIDs) regression model. This model incorporates control variables, reflecting firm-level characteristics and regional economic conditions. The results show that GFRPZP significantly enhances corporate SDP, with stronger effects observed among non-state-owned enterprises (Non-SOEs), companies situated in eastern regions, those in non-heavily polluting industries, and high-tech companies. Mediation analysis indicates that the policy enhances sustainable development through four main channels: improving the quality and quantity of green innovation, easing financing constraints, and increasing analyst attention. Moderation analysis further demonstrates that digital transformation and internal control strengthen the policy’s effect. Full article
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32 pages, 1432 KiB  
Article
From Carbon to Capability: How Corporate Green and Low-Carbon Transitions Foster New Quality Productive Forces in China
by Lili Teng, Yukun Luo and Shuwen Wei
Sustainability 2025, 17(15), 6657; https://doi.org/10.3390/su17156657 - 22 Jul 2025
Viewed by 423
Abstract
China’s national strategies emphasize both achieving carbon peaking and neutrality (“dual carbon” objectives) and fostering high-quality economic development. This dual focus highlights the critical importance of the Green and Low-Carbon Transition (GLCT) of the economy and the development of New Quality Productive Forces [...] Read more.
China’s national strategies emphasize both achieving carbon peaking and neutrality (“dual carbon” objectives) and fostering high-quality economic development. This dual focus highlights the critical importance of the Green and Low-Carbon Transition (GLCT) of the economy and the development of New Quality Productive Forces (NQPF). Firms are central actors in this transformation, prompting the core research question: How does corporate engagement in GLCT contribute to the formation of NQPF? We investigate this relationship using panel data comprising 33,768 firm-year observations for A-share listed companies across diverse industries in China from 2012 to 2022. Corporate GLCT is measured via textual analysis of annual reports, while an NQPF index, incorporating both tangible and intangible dimensions, is constructed using the entropy method. Our empirical analysis relies primarily on fixed-effects regressions, supplemented by various robustness checks and alternative econometric specifications. The results demonstrate a significantly positive relationship: corporate GLCT robustly promotes the development of NQPF, with dynamic lag structures suggesting delayed productivity realization. Mechanism analysis reveals that this effect operates through three primary channels: improved access to financing, stimulated collaborative innovation and enhanced resource-allocation efficiency. Heterogeneity analysis indicates that the positive impact of GLCT on NQPF is more pronounced for state-owned enterprises (SOEs), firms operating in high-emission sectors, those in energy-efficient or environmentally friendly industries, technology-intensive sectors, non-heavily polluting industries and companies situated in China’s eastern regions. Overall, our findings suggest that corporate GLCT enhances NQPF by improving resource-utilization efficiency and fostering innovation, with these effects amplified by specific regional advantages and firm characteristics. This study offers implications for corporate strategy, highlighting how aligning GLCT initiatives with core business objectives can drive NQPF, and provides evidence relevant for policymakers aiming to optimize environmental governance and foster sustainable economic pathways. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Economic and Business Aspects of Sustainability)
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26 pages, 1055 KiB  
Article
Environmental Governance Innovation and Corporate Sustainable Performance in Emerging Markets: A Study of the Green Technology Innovation Driving Effect of China’s New Environmental Protection Laws
by Jide Zhang, Ruorui Wu and Hao Wang
Sustainability 2025, 17(14), 6556; https://doi.org/10.3390/su17146556 - 18 Jul 2025
Viewed by 524
Abstract
Against the backdrop of the accelerated transition to sustainable development in global emerging markets, the synergistic mechanism between environmental governance innovation and corporate green transformation has become a key issue in realizing high-quality development. As the world’s largest emerging economy, China’s new Environmental [...] Read more.
Against the backdrop of the accelerated transition to sustainable development in global emerging markets, the synergistic mechanism between environmental governance innovation and corporate green transformation has become a key issue in realizing high-quality development. As the world’s largest emerging economy, China’s new Environmental Protection Law (EPL), implemented in 2015, has promoted green technology innovation and performance improvement of heavily polluting enterprises by strengthening environmental regulation. This paper takes Chinese A-share listed companies as samples from 2012–2023, treats the EPL as a quasi-natural experiment, and applies the DID method to explore the path of its impact on the performance of heavily polluting firms, with a focus on analyzing the mediating effect of green technological innovation and the moderating role of firm size and regional differences. The study revealed the following findings: the implementation of the EPL significantly improves the performance of heavily polluting enterprises, which verifies the applicability of “Porter’s hypothesis” in emerging markets; green technological innovation plays a partly intermediary role in the process of policy affecting enterprise performance, indicating that environmental regulation achieves win–win economic and environmental benefits by driving the innovation compensation mechanism; and there is significant heterogeneity in policy effects, with large-scale firms and firms in the eastern region experiencing more pronounced performance improvements, reflecting differences in resource endowments and institutional implementation strength within emerging markets. This study provides empirical evidence for emerging market countries to optimize their environmental governance policies and construct a “regulation–innovation–performance” synergistic mechanism, which will help green economic transformation and ecological civilization construction. Full article
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25 pages, 1159 KiB  
Article
Analysis of Sustainable Development Goals (2016–2030) and Their Integration into Tourism Activities in Lago Agrio Canton, Sucumbíos Province: SDG 9 (Industry, Innovation, and Infrastructure) and SDG 15 (Life on Land)
by Patricia Marisol Chango-Cañaveral, Pablo Alejandro Quezada-Sarmiento and Valeria Jaqueline Morales-Herrera
Sustainability 2025, 17(13), 6023; https://doi.org/10.3390/su17136023 - 30 Jun 2025
Viewed by 684
Abstract
This study analyzes the integration of Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) 9 (Industry, Innovation, and Infrastructure) and 15 (Life on Land) into the tourism development strategies of Lago Agrio Canton, Sucumbíos Province, Ecuador. The main objective is to assess how tourism can serve as [...] Read more.
This study analyzes the integration of Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) 9 (Industry, Innovation, and Infrastructure) and 15 (Life on Land) into the tourism development strategies of Lago Agrio Canton, Sucumbíos Province, Ecuador. The main objective is to assess how tourism can serve as a driver for sustainable infrastructure development, environmental conservation, and inclusive local growth, in alignment with the 2030 Agenda. A qualitative methodology was adopted, involving documentary analysis with exploratory and descriptive scopes. The sources included national development plans, regional policy frameworks, institutional reports, and the relevant academic literature. This study employed territorial indicators related to infrastructure quality, ecosystem protection, and stakeholder participation to evaluate SDG alignment. The results highlight that sustainable tourism practices—particularly those incorporating corporate social responsibility and environmental stewardship—can stimulate innovation and enhance resilience in underdeveloped territories. Wetlands and forested areas emerge as key natural assets with strong potential for ecological tourism and sustainable investment. The findings suggest that collaborative actions between the public and private sectors, guided by SDGs 9 and 15, can generate long-term benefits, including biodiversity preservation, improved service infrastructure, and economic inclusion for local communities. Overall, the research underscores the potential of sustainable tourism as a practical mechanism for localizing the SDGs in fragile yet high-value ecological regions. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Innovative Learning Environments and Sustainable Development)
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27 pages, 526 KiB  
Article
The Effect of Corporate Venture Capital on Labor Income Share: Evidence from China
by Lanlan Sun, Lu Zhang and Shaolei Qu
Int. J. Financial Stud. 2025, 13(2), 100; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijfs13020100 - 4 Jun 2025
Viewed by 531
Abstract
This study examines the impact of corporate venture capital (CVC) on the labor income share of science and innovation enterprises, focusing on data from China’s Science and Technology Innovation Board (STIB) and Growth Enterprise Market (GEM) between 2010 and 2022. Empirical results reveal [...] Read more.
This study examines the impact of corporate venture capital (CVC) on the labor income share of science and innovation enterprises, focusing on data from China’s Science and Technology Innovation Board (STIB) and Growth Enterprise Market (GEM) between 2010 and 2022. Empirical results reveal a significant inverted U-shaped relationship between CVC shareholding and the labor income share of invested firms. CVC increases the labor income share by enhancing corporate governance, encouraging digital transformation, and improving human capital quality, but this effect diminishes when CVC shareholding exceeds a certain threshold. The moderating role of media attention and the heterogeneity of this relationship across regions and financial conditions are further explored. Additionally, the study identifies a positive U-shaped connection between CVC shareholding and the corporate pay gap, highlighting CVC’s complex role in influencing income inequality within firms. This research contributes to the literature by unveiling the nonlinear effects of CVC on income distribution, offering new insights into its dual role in promoting innovation and equity. Practically, it provides actionable recommendations for firms to optimize CVC ownership and for policymakers to design targeted interventions that address regional and financial disparities. By bridging the gap between CVC investment strategies and labor income fairness, this study lays the foundation for a balanced approach to sustainable economic development. Full article
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25 pages, 2716 KiB  
Article
How Do Environmental Regulation and Media Pressure Influence Greenwashing Behaviors in Chinese Manufacturing Enterprises?
by Zhi Yang and Xiaoyu Zha
Sustainability 2025, 17(11), 5066; https://doi.org/10.3390/su17115066 - 31 May 2025
Viewed by 552
Abstract
Faced with mounting pressure to achieve high-quality green transformation, manufacturing enterprises are increasingly scrutinized for greenwashing behaviors. This study develops a novel hybrid modeling framework that combines evolutionary game theory with the SEIR epidemic model to investigate the dynamic interactions between environmental regulation, [...] Read more.
Faced with mounting pressure to achieve high-quality green transformation, manufacturing enterprises are increasingly scrutinized for greenwashing behaviors. This study develops a novel hybrid modeling framework that combines evolutionary game theory with the SEIR epidemic model to investigate the dynamic interactions between environmental regulation, media pressure, and green innovation behavior. The model captures how strategic decisions among boundedly rational actors evolve over time under dual external pressures. Simulation results show that stronger environmental regulatory intensity accelerates the adoption of substantive green innovation and concurrently reduces the media pressure associated with greenwashing. Moreover, while social media disclosure has a limited impact during the early stages of greenwashing information diffusion, its influence becomes significantly amplified once a critical dissemination threshold is surpassed, rapidly transforming latent information into widespread public concern. This amplification triggers significant public opinion pressure, which, in turn, incentivizes local governments to enforce stricter environmental policies. The findings reveal a synergistic governance mechanism where environmental regulation and media scrutiny jointly curb greenwashing and foster genuine corporate sustainability. Full article
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22 pages, 303 KiB  
Article
Geographical Accessibility and Corporate Technological Innovation—Evidence from a Quasi-Natural Experiment
by Xiaoli Qiao and Man Wang
Sustainability 2025, 17(11), 4846; https://doi.org/10.3390/su17114846 - 25 May 2025
Viewed by 492
Abstract
Geographic accessibility is an important determinant of the quality of interactions between firms and stakeholders and has a significant impact on the technological innovation of enterprises. By using a quasi-natural experiment implemented with China’s high-speed rail service and designing a high-speed rail network [...] Read more.
Geographic accessibility is an important determinant of the quality of interactions between firms and stakeholders and has a significant impact on the technological innovation of enterprises. By using a quasi-natural experiment implemented with China’s high-speed rail service and designing a high-speed rail network centrality indicator using social network analysis, we examine the impact of geographic accessibility on corporate technological innovation. The results show that geographic accessibility significantly promotes the technological innovation of enterprises, especially for enterprise exploratory innovation. Mechanism analysis indicates that geographic accessibility promotes enterprise technological innovation by reducing financing constraints and increasing technicians’ mobility. Cross-sectional analysis reveals that the prompting effect is more obvious in high-tech firms and firms in less-developed regions. This study enriches the research on geographic accessibility and corporate technological innovation, and has significant implications for enhancing the core competitiveness and sustainable development of enterprises. Full article
35 pages, 805 KiB  
Article
Retail Investors’ Social Media Interaction and Corporate Green Innovation: Evidence from China Listed Companies in Heavily Polluting Industries
by Min Zhang, Zuxiang Zhang and Yu Su
Sustainability 2025, 17(10), 4558; https://doi.org/10.3390/su17104558 - 16 May 2025
Viewed by 587
Abstract
Green innovation, which promotes the coordinated development of the economy and ecology, serves as a critical means to achieve enterprises’ green transformation. Against the backdrop of the Internet era, retail investors, as an important supervisory group for enterprises, can generate online public opinion [...] Read more.
Green innovation, which promotes the coordinated development of the economy and ecology, serves as a critical means to achieve enterprises’ green transformation. Against the backdrop of the Internet era, retail investors, as an important supervisory group for enterprises, can generate online public opinion through interactive exchanges on social media platforms. This raises the question: Can such public opinion rooted in social media influence enterprises’ green innovation behaviors? To address this, this study uses data from Chinese A-share listed enterprises in heavily polluting industries on the Shanghai and Shenzhen Stock Exchanges from 2008–2021, comprising a total sample size of 8755, and employs ordinary least squares (OLS) regression models to empirically examine the relationship between retail investors’ social media interactions and enterprise green innovation. The findings reveal that interactive discussions by retail investors on social media significantly enhance enterprises’ green innovation levels. Mechanism tests show that social media interactions among these investors strengthen enterprises’ environmental awareness and alleviate their financing constraints, thereby promoting green innovation. Moderation effect tests indicate that the quality of social media information interaction and public opinion sentiment positively moderate the relationship between retail’s social media interactions and enterprise green innovation. Heterogeneity tests further show that the positive effect of retail’s social media interactions on enterprise green innovation is more pronounced in regions with stronger environmental information regulation and stronger investor protection. The conclusions of this study not only enrich research on the relationship between retail investors’ social media supervision and enterprises’ behavioral decision-making but also extend the literature on the influencing factors of enterprise green innovation from the perspective of public governance. These findings hold important implications for enterprises’ green transformation practices under the “double carbon” goals and provide valuable insights for corporate governance in the era of the digital economy. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue ESG Performance, Investment, and Risk Management)
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25 pages, 966 KiB  
Article
China’s Industry–Finance Collaboration Pilot in Stimulating Corporate Green Innovation
by Xinyan Xu, Jieyu Li and Jianming Zheng
Sustainability 2025, 17(10), 4508; https://doi.org/10.3390/su17104508 - 15 May 2025
Viewed by 693
Abstract
The Industry–Finance Collaboration Pilot (IFCP) integrates governmental green guidance with digital collaboration platforms to promote non-equity-based cooperation between industrial and financial sectors. Using a Difference-in-Differences (DID) approach and a sample of A-share listed industrial firms on the Shanghai and Shenzhen Stock Exchanges from [...] Read more.
The Industry–Finance Collaboration Pilot (IFCP) integrates governmental green guidance with digital collaboration platforms to promote non-equity-based cooperation between industrial and financial sectors. Using a Difference-in-Differences (DID) approach and a sample of A-share listed industrial firms on the Shanghai and Shenzhen Stock Exchanges from 2011 to 2023, this study examines the IFCP’s impact on corporate green innovation (GI). Results show that the IFCP increases the number of green patent applications by 7.5% on average, indicating its effect in stimulating GI. This effect operates through two main mechanisms. First, under governmental green guidance, the IFCP encourages local green fiscal subsidies, increases green investor participation, improves environmental information disclosure, and lowers agency costs. Second, through digital finance empowerment, it mitigates information asymmetry and transaction costs in financial activities, thereby reducing credit costs and enhancing firms’ access to green credit. The effect of the IFCP on GI is more pronounced in regions with stricter environmental regulation, in pollution-intensive industries, and among firms with smaller asset sizes. Further analysis indicates that the IFCP primarily stimulates tactical, low-value GI driven by compliance or opportunistic motives, rather than promoting substantive, high-quality innovation. This study provides empirical evidence and policy insights into how governmental green guidance and digital finance empowerment can jointly promote green industrial development. Full article
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22 pages, 301 KiB  
Article
Institutional Cross-Ownership and Corporate Sustainability Performance: Empirical Evidence Based on United Nations SDGs Ratings
by Miaomiao Yi, Fei Ren and Zhang-Hangjian Chen
Sustainability 2025, 17(10), 4461; https://doi.org/10.3390/su17104461 - 14 May 2025
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 528
Abstract
Corporate sustainable development, as a critical component of Chinese-style modernization, is essential for achieving high-quality economic growth, yet the influence of institutional cross-ownership—a prevalent phenomenon in stock markets—on corporate sustainability performance remains contested. Using a sample of Chinese A-share listed companies from 2012 [...] Read more.
Corporate sustainable development, as a critical component of Chinese-style modernization, is essential for achieving high-quality economic growth, yet the influence of institutional cross-ownership—a prevalent phenomenon in stock markets—on corporate sustainability performance remains contested. Using a sample of Chinese A-share listed companies from 2012 to 2023, this study innovatively employs micro-level data on the degree of the achievement of the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) to measure corporate sustainability performance and investigate the influence of institutional cross-ownership on corporate sustainability performance. This study presents the following findings: (1) Institutional cross-ownership undermines corporate sustainability performance, a finding that remains robust to a series of endogeneity and robustness tests. (2) Mechanism analysis reveals a triple erosion effect: short-termism driven by institutional investors’ preference for immediate financial returns, market power through cross-ownership that dampens competitive pressures, and reduced green innovation investments that weaken sustainability. (3) This negative effect is more pronounced in firms located in high-productivity regions or central and eastern China, in firms facing lax environmental regulations, and in state-owned enterprises. (4) The impact of cross-ownership on sustainability performance varies across dimensions, with the negative effects concentrated in the economic and social dimensions. This study enriches the literature on the factors influencing corporate sustainability performance, providing new empirical evidence for governments to guide institutional investors in long-term value investment and firms to implement effective sustainable development strategies. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Environmental Governance and Environmental Responsibility Research)
29 pages, 331 KiB  
Article
The Impacts and Mechanisms of Corporate Social Responsibility Disclosure on Corporate Exports: With Reference to the Moderating Effect of Environmental Regulation
by Sirui Dong, Ya He and Haonan Chen
Sustainability 2025, 17(10), 4430; https://doi.org/10.3390/su17104430 - 13 May 2025
Viewed by 691
Abstract
Corporate social responsibility (CSR) disclosure plays a pivotal role in mitigating “blue” (labor standard) and “green” (environmental standard) trade barriers, optimizing the foreign trade ecosystem, fostering sustainable development of export-oriented enterprises, and advancing societal welfare objectives—all critical to maintaining high-quality social order in [...] Read more.
Corporate social responsibility (CSR) disclosure plays a pivotal role in mitigating “blue” (labor standard) and “green” (environmental standard) trade barriers, optimizing the foreign trade ecosystem, fostering sustainable development of export-oriented enterprises, and advancing societal welfare objectives—all critical to maintaining high-quality social order in China. Grounded in institutional and strategic management theories, this study systematically investigates the effects of CSR disclosure on corporate export performance, focusing on mediating and moderating mechanisms, and conducts rigorous empirical testing using comprehensive firm-level CSR disclosure data from Chinese listed companies. The results reveal the following key findings: (1) CSR disclosure positively influences corporate exports; (2) enterprise financing capacity and innovation output serve as dual mediating mechanisms, through which CSR disclosure enhances export performance by improving access to external capital and stimulating product/service innovation; (3) environmental regulations amplify the export-promoting effect of CSR disclosure, indicating that institutional environmental constraints incentivize firms to leverage disclosure as a strategic response to global sustainability demands; (4) heterogeneity analysis reveals that large enterprises derive the strongest export benefits from CSR disclosure, followed by medium-sized and small enterprises; and (5) private enterprises exhibit significantly greater export gains from CSR disclosure compared to state-owned enterprises. These results underscore the context-specific and multi-dimensional nature of CSR disclosure’s impact on exports, highlighting how firm size and ownership structure shape the efficacy of disclosure strategies in global markets. This study contributes to both academic literature on corporate sustainability and practical policy by demonstrating how strategic CSR disclosure can serve as a tool for overcoming institutional barriers and enhancing international competitiveness. Full article
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