Corporate Social Responsibility and Corporate Financial Performance in the Food and Beverage Industry

Corporate executives have a responsibility to stakeholders to justify expenses, including those devoted to corporate social responsibility (CSR) initiatives, and strengthen the organization's financial position. Due to a lack of consistent information, some food and beverage industry managers d...

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Main Author: Rieschick, Giselle
Format: Others
Language:en
Published: ScholarWorks 2017
Subjects:
CSR
Online Access:https://scholarworks.waldenu.edu/dissertations/4677
https://scholarworks.waldenu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=5957&context=dissertations
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spelling ndltd-waldenu.edu-oai-scholarworks.waldenu.edu-dissertations-59572019-10-30T01:24:35Z Corporate Social Responsibility and Corporate Financial Performance in the Food and Beverage Industry Rieschick, Giselle Corporate executives have a responsibility to stakeholders to justify expenses, including those devoted to corporate social responsibility (CSR) initiatives, and strengthen the organization's financial position. Due to a lack of consistent information, some food and beverage industry managers do not understand the relationship between social and environmental CSR initiatives and financial performance. Grounded in stakeholder and ethical theory, this quantitative correlational study examined the relationship between 2 variables: the independent variable of social and environmental CSR activities, for which the 2016 Best Corporate Citizens index of 'Corporate Responsibility Magazine' served as a proxy, and the dependent variable of financial performance, as measured by reviewing a 24-month return on assets. The significance test appears twice for a bivariate regression analysis: The F test reported as part of the ANOVA table and the t test associated with the independent variable in the coefficients table. The p value is the same as they are the same test. The yield was: F(1, 10) = .246, p = .633 and t(10) = .496, p = .633. The magnitude of the correlation coefficient was .173, which suggested that financial performance had no relationship with social and environmental CSR initiatives. When reviewing the overall financial rank of all 100 companies in the BCC index, a similar trend emerged. The yield was: F(1, 99) = .202, p = .654 and t(99) = -.449, p = .654. The extent of the correlation coefficient was -.045, which suggested that financial performance had no relationship with social and environmental CSR initiatives. This study has an implication for positive social change with management's decisions about social and environmental sustainability initiatives. 2017-01-01T08:00:00Z text application/pdf https://scholarworks.waldenu.edu/dissertations/4677 https://scholarworks.waldenu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=5957&context=dissertations Walden Dissertations and Doctoral Studies en ScholarWorks Corporate Social Responsibility CSR Financial Responsibility Business
collection NDLTD
language en
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Corporate Social Responsibility
CSR
Financial Responsibility
Business
spellingShingle Corporate Social Responsibility
CSR
Financial Responsibility
Business
Rieschick, Giselle
Corporate Social Responsibility and Corporate Financial Performance in the Food and Beverage Industry
description Corporate executives have a responsibility to stakeholders to justify expenses, including those devoted to corporate social responsibility (CSR) initiatives, and strengthen the organization's financial position. Due to a lack of consistent information, some food and beverage industry managers do not understand the relationship between social and environmental CSR initiatives and financial performance. Grounded in stakeholder and ethical theory, this quantitative correlational study examined the relationship between 2 variables: the independent variable of social and environmental CSR activities, for which the 2016 Best Corporate Citizens index of 'Corporate Responsibility Magazine' served as a proxy, and the dependent variable of financial performance, as measured by reviewing a 24-month return on assets. The significance test appears twice for a bivariate regression analysis: The F test reported as part of the ANOVA table and the t test associated with the independent variable in the coefficients table. The p value is the same as they are the same test. The yield was: F(1, 10) = .246, p = .633 and t(10) = .496, p = .633. The magnitude of the correlation coefficient was .173, which suggested that financial performance had no relationship with social and environmental CSR initiatives. When reviewing the overall financial rank of all 100 companies in the BCC index, a similar trend emerged. The yield was: F(1, 99) = .202, p = .654 and t(99) = -.449, p = .654. The extent of the correlation coefficient was -.045, which suggested that financial performance had no relationship with social and environmental CSR initiatives. This study has an implication for positive social change with management's decisions about social and environmental sustainability initiatives.
author Rieschick, Giselle
author_facet Rieschick, Giselle
author_sort Rieschick, Giselle
title Corporate Social Responsibility and Corporate Financial Performance in the Food and Beverage Industry
title_short Corporate Social Responsibility and Corporate Financial Performance in the Food and Beverage Industry
title_full Corporate Social Responsibility and Corporate Financial Performance in the Food and Beverage Industry
title_fullStr Corporate Social Responsibility and Corporate Financial Performance in the Food and Beverage Industry
title_full_unstemmed Corporate Social Responsibility and Corporate Financial Performance in the Food and Beverage Industry
title_sort corporate social responsibility and corporate financial performance in the food and beverage industry
publisher ScholarWorks
publishDate 2017
url https://scholarworks.waldenu.edu/dissertations/4677
https://scholarworks.waldenu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=5957&context=dissertations
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