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The Primary Importance of Corporate Social Responsibility and Ethicality in Corporate Reputation: An Empirical Study
Author(s) -
Walker Kent,
Dyck Bruno
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
business and society review
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.524
H-Index - 21
eISSN - 1467-8594
pISSN - 0045-3609
DOI - 10.1111/basr.12028
Subject(s) - corporate social responsibility , business , reputation , empirical research , accounting , primary (astronomy) , social responsibility , public relations , sociology , political science , statistics , social science , physics , mathematics , astronomy
Abstract We examine three assumptions commonly held in the corporate reputation literature: (1) reputation ratings of owners and investors are generally representative of all stakeholders; (2) stakeholders will generally provide a higher reputation rating to firms that emphasize corporate social responsibility versus firms that do not; and (3) profitability is the primary criterion of importance to all stakeholders when rating a firm's reputation. Using an exploratory in‐class exercise, our findings suggest that: (1) there are significant differences among stakeholder groups in their reputation ratings; (2) firms that emphasize corporate social responsibility are not rated more highly across all stakeholder groups; and (3) for all stakeholder groups, the ethicality criterion explained more of the variance in firms' reputation ratings than the profitability criterion.

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