CSR Performance Proxies in Large-Sample Studies: 'Umbrella Advocates', Construct Clarity and the 'Validity Police'

76 Pages Posted: 31 Jan 2018

See all articles by Lies Bouten

Lies Bouten

Iéseg School of Management

Charles H. Cho

ESSEC Business School; York University - Schulich School of Business

Giovanna Michelon

University of Bristol

Robin W. Roberts

University of Central Florida - Kenneth G. Dixon School of Accounting

Date Written: August 2017

Abstract

Corporate social responsibility (CSR) performance is multidimensional, and is often considered an “umbrella” construct (Gond & Crane, 2010). This multidimensionality has generated substantive concerns regarding the construct validity and reliability of common empirical proxies of CSR performance (CSRP); thereby attracting the “validity police” (Rowley & Berman, 2000; Gond & Crane, 2010). Although the breadth and depth of CSRP measurement continues to increase, its links to an underlying, agreed-upon theory remains in doubt. Meanwhile, a market for quantitative measurement of CSRP has grown dramatically. The major providers of CSR ratings are: MSCI (ESG STATS, formerly known as KLD); Thomson Reuters (ASSET4); and Sustainalytics (ESG Indicators). Almost all large-scale empirical studies dealing with CSR use only one of the three providers as the source for their CSRP proxies. The purpose of our study is to review the CSRP constructs and proxies employed in studies published in a select set of influential journals and working paper series, and to determine whether the results might be influenced by the selection of CSRP proxies. We situate our analysis within broader academic debates concerning the calibration of construct and proxy convergence and precision, which provides a basis for evaluating the empirical durability of CSRP constructs across proxy specifications. Using a combination of statistical techniques and interviews with professionals involved in the CSR ratings and investment industry, our analyses show the potential for empirical results to be significantly sensitive to proxy selection and provide qualitative evidence that helps explain the need for more precise and thorough construct and proxy development. We assert that this research is critically important because the accounting literature builds on significant results generated by different proxies for CSRP.

Keywords: Construct Clarity; Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR); Corporate Social Responsibility Performance (CSRP); Rating Providers; Validity

JEL Classification: M40; M41; M14

Suggested Citation

Bouten, Lies and Cho, Charles H. and Michelon, Giovanna and Roberts, Robin W., CSR Performance Proxies in Large-Sample Studies: 'Umbrella Advocates', Construct Clarity and the 'Validity Police' (August 2017). Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=3107182 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.3107182

Lies Bouten

Iéseg School of Management ( email )

socle de la Grande-Arche
1, parvis de la Défense
Puteaux, 92800
France

Charles H. Cho (Contact Author)

ESSEC Business School ( email )

3 Avenue Bernard Hirsch
CS 50105 CERGY
CERGY, CERGY PONTOISE CEDEX 95021
France

HOME PAGE: http://www.essec.edu/faculty/cho-charles

York University - Schulich School of Business ( email )

4700 Keele Street
Toronto, Ontario M3J 1P3
Canada

HOME PAGE: http://schulich.yorku.ca/faculty/charles-cho

Giovanna Michelon

University of Bristol ( email )

University of Bristol,
Senate House, Tyndall Avenue
Bristol, Avon BS8 ITH
United Kingdom
BS8 1PQ (Fax)

Robin W. Roberts

University of Central Florida - Kenneth G. Dixon School of Accounting ( email )

University of Central Florida
P.O. Box 161400
Orlando, FL 32816-1400
United States
407-823-2871 (Phone)
407-823-3881 (Fax)

Do you have negative results from your research you’d like to share?

Paper statistics

Downloads
1,023
Abstract Views
4,715
Rank
41,028
PlumX Metrics