The role of national culture as a lens for stakeholder evaluation of corporate social performance and its effect on corporate reputation

  1. Pérez-Cornejo, Clara 1
  2. de Quevedo-Puente, Esther 1
  3. Delgado-García, Juan-Bautista 1
  1. 1 Universidad de Burgos
    info

    Universidad de Burgos

    Burgos, España

    ROR https://ror.org/049da5t36

Revue:
BRQ Business Research Quarterly

ISSN: 2340-9444

Année de publication: 2021

Pages: 234094442110074

Type: Article

DOI: 10.1177/23409444211007487 GOOGLE SCHOLAR lock_openAccès ouvert editor

D'autres publications dans: BRQ Business Research Quarterly

Objectifs de Développement Durable

Résumé

Studies have shown that corporate social performance (CSP) is an antecedent of corporate reputation, acting as a signal that affects stakeholders’ perceptions and expectations about a firm’s future behavior. However, the perceptions, expectations, and interests of stakeholders may be affected by external factors, such as national culture, which shapes their beliefs about what role companies play in society. Drawing on institutional theory and Hofstede’s cultural dimensions, we analyze how stakeholders’ national culture moderates the relationship between CSP and corporate reputation. The results of the analysis of an international sample for the period 2010 to 2016 show that low individualism (i.e., collectivism), low masculinity (i.e., femininity), low power distance, and low uncertainty avoidance intensify the positive relationship between CSP and corporate reputation. JEL CLASSIFICATION: M14, L14

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