Does the presence of a corporate social responsibility committee matter for bank risk-taking?
Issued Date
2025-01-01
Resource Type
ISSN
14757702
eISSN
17587700
Scopus ID
2-s2.0-105016889467
Journal Title
Review of Accounting and Finance
Rights Holder(s)
SCOPUS
Bibliographic Citation
Review of Accounting and Finance (2025)
Suggested Citation
Saeed A., Chaudhry S.M., Manita R., Suntraruk P. Does the presence of a corporate social responsibility committee matter for bank risk-taking?. Review of Accounting and Finance (2025). doi:10.1108/RAF-05-2024-0175 Retrieved from: https://repository.li.mahidol.ac.th/handle/123456789/112403
Title
Does the presence of a corporate social responsibility committee matter for bank risk-taking?
Author(s)
Author's Affiliation
Corresponding Author(s)
Other Contributor(s)
Abstract
Purpose – This study aims to explore whether the presence of a CSR committee is effective in mitigating the bank tail risk. Next, how corporate governance attributes contribute to this association. Design/methodology/approach – Using data from the US banking sector, the final sample consists of 583 bank-years from 130 banks. The authors start with a bank-year fixed effect regression analysis. Further, they used bank-level cluster effect, Fama–MacBeth regression and Weighted least squares regression for robustness. For endogeneity, they also apply two-stage least squares and generalized method of moments. Findings – The regression estimation documents that the existence of a CSR committee effectively reduces the tail risk in the banking sector. The main findings are robust with different regression settings and alternate proxies of tail risk. Further, the authors also confirm the existence of this relationship with different levels of corporate governance (CEO duality, board independence, board size and gender diversity) and corporate social responsibility. Social implications – Enhancing comprehension of the CSR committee’s influence on banking tail risk is pivotal for banks in refining their sustainability strategies, a matter of significant societal importance. This research contributes to advancing the UN SDGs, particularly Goal 17, which emphasizes fostering partnerships to achieve common objectives. Originality/value – Prior research has intensively focused on whether CSR policies are associated with bank risk-taking. In addition, it has mostly formulated the causality from ESG performance to bank risk; hence, the literature lacks heterogeneity in this respect. The investigation validates that the presence of a CSR committee in the financial sector effectively enhances the bank’s ESG performance and mitigates its risk.
