Discussion paper

DP10399 Social Capital, Trust, and Firm Performance during the Financial Crisis

We study the extent to which a firm?s social capital, as measured by the intensity of a firm?s corporate social responsibility (CSR) activities, affects firm performance during the 2008-2009 financial crisis. We find that high-CSR firms have crisis-period stock returns that are four to five percentage points higher than low-CSR firms, all else equal. In contrast, we find no difference in returns between high- and low-CSR firms either before or after the crisis. During the crisis, high-CSR firms also experience higher profitability, sales growth, and sales per employee and a decline in their accounts receivable relative to low-CSR firms. This evidence is consistent with the view that the trust between the firm and its stakeholders and investors, built through investments in social capital, pays off when the overall level of trust in corporations and markets suffers a negative shock.

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Citation

Servaes, H and A Tamayo (2015), ‘DP10399 Social Capital, Trust, and Firm Performance during the Financial Crisis‘, CEPR Discussion Paper No. 10399. CEPR Press, Paris & London. https://cepr.org/publications/dp10399