Do CSR Practices Of Banks In Mauritius Lead To Satisfaction And Loyalty?

This study aims to determine how CSR activities of banks in Mauritius impact on customers’ satisfaction and loyalty towards banks. A stakeholder approach to CSR and Carroll’s (1991) four part definition was adopted, which included economic, legal, ethical and philanthropic corporate social responsib...

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Main Authors: Ramlugun Vidisha Gunesh, Raboute Wendy Geraldine
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Sciendo 2015-08-01
Series:Studies in Business and Economics
Subjects:
csr
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1515/sbe-2015-0025
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spelling doaj-5bad2168f7d144429605b5e1199daf272021-09-05T14:00:24ZengSciendoStudies in Business and Economics2344-54162015-08-0110212814410.1515/sbe-2015-0025sbe-2015-0025Do CSR Practices Of Banks In Mauritius Lead To Satisfaction And Loyalty?Ramlugun Vidisha Gunesh0Raboute Wendy Geraldine1Faculty of Law and Management, University of MauritiusFaculty of Law and Management, University of MauritiusThis study aims to determine how CSR activities of banks in Mauritius impact on customers’ satisfaction and loyalty towards banks. A stakeholder approach to CSR and Carroll’s (1991) four part definition was adopted, which included economic, legal, ethical and philanthropic corporate social responsibilities. A three- section questionnaire was used for data collection. 384 questionnaires were distributed, out of which 352 were returned. The results indicate that philanthropic CSR, economic CSR and ethical CSR, in their order of descending importance, are significant predictors of customer satisfaction and loyalty. The study shows that legal responsibilities however did not influence customer satisfaction and loyalty. The study concludes that philanthropic, economic and ethical CSR could be areas to further investigate with a view to benefit from competitive advantage in the banking sector. The study purports to contribute to existing literature by providing evidence that Carroll’s model may not be applicable in non-western context, more particularly so, in small economies. The study also advocates future research avenues.https://doi.org/10.1515/sbe-2015-0025mauritiusstakeholder approachcsrbankssatisfaction and loyalty
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ramlugun Vidisha Gunesh
Raboute Wendy Geraldine
spellingShingle Ramlugun Vidisha Gunesh
Raboute Wendy Geraldine
Do CSR Practices Of Banks In Mauritius Lead To Satisfaction And Loyalty?
Studies in Business and Economics
mauritius
stakeholder approach
csr
banks
satisfaction and loyalty
author_facet Ramlugun Vidisha Gunesh
Raboute Wendy Geraldine
author_sort Ramlugun Vidisha Gunesh
title Do CSR Practices Of Banks In Mauritius Lead To Satisfaction And Loyalty?
title_short Do CSR Practices Of Banks In Mauritius Lead To Satisfaction And Loyalty?
title_full Do CSR Practices Of Banks In Mauritius Lead To Satisfaction And Loyalty?
title_fullStr Do CSR Practices Of Banks In Mauritius Lead To Satisfaction And Loyalty?
title_full_unstemmed Do CSR Practices Of Banks In Mauritius Lead To Satisfaction And Loyalty?
title_sort do csr practices of banks in mauritius lead to satisfaction and loyalty?
publisher Sciendo
series Studies in Business and Economics
issn 2344-5416
publishDate 2015-08-01
description This study aims to determine how CSR activities of banks in Mauritius impact on customers’ satisfaction and loyalty towards banks. A stakeholder approach to CSR and Carroll’s (1991) four part definition was adopted, which included economic, legal, ethical and philanthropic corporate social responsibilities. A three- section questionnaire was used for data collection. 384 questionnaires were distributed, out of which 352 were returned. The results indicate that philanthropic CSR, economic CSR and ethical CSR, in their order of descending importance, are significant predictors of customer satisfaction and loyalty. The study shows that legal responsibilities however did not influence customer satisfaction and loyalty. The study concludes that philanthropic, economic and ethical CSR could be areas to further investigate with a view to benefit from competitive advantage in the banking sector. The study purports to contribute to existing literature by providing evidence that Carroll’s model may not be applicable in non-western context, more particularly so, in small economies. The study also advocates future research avenues.
topic mauritius
stakeholder approach
csr
banks
satisfaction and loyalty
url https://doi.org/10.1515/sbe-2015-0025
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