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Shareholder Value Maximization—Is There a Role for Corporate Social Responsibility?
Author(s) -
Martin John,
Petty William,
Wallace James
Publication year - 2009
Publication title -
journal of applied corporate finance
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1745-6622
pISSN - 1078-1196
DOI - 10.1111/j.1745-6622.2009.00232.x
Subject(s) - stakeholder , corporate social responsibility , shareholder value , shareholder , maximization , liberian dollar , business , value (mathematics) , stakeholder theory , economics , marketing , corporate governance , microeconomics , public relations , finance , management , machine learning , political science , computer science
Although often viewed as inconsistent with the corporate goal of value maximization, the corporate social responsibility (CSR) movement can add value by helping companies develop and maintain their reputations for fair dealing with each of their important non‐investor stakeholder groups, including employees, suppliers, and local communities. Such “reputational capital” in turn helps reinforce the commitment of those stakeholders through what amount to informal or implicit contracts—contracts that are often critical to a company's long‐run success. Nevertheless, the importance and difficulty of balancing stakeholder interests against the overarching goal of efficiency and value maximization cannot be overstated. As with any corporate investment, each dollar of investment in a corporate stakeholder group should be justified by at least a dollar of expected return over a finite time horizon. By practicing this kind of “enlightened value maximization,” to borrow Michael Jensen's phrase, management is likely to end up increasing not only its returns to shareholders, but the size of the corporate pie that is divided among all its stakeholders. Viewed in this light, CSR and value maximization have the potential to be complementary undertakings that result in a virtuous circle in which “doing good” helps companies do well, and doing well provides the wherewithal to do more good.

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